December 2003 DX TImes

Transcription

December 2003 DX TImes
N.Z. RADIO
DX
LEAGUE
New Zealand DX Times
Monthly journal of the
New Zealand Radio DX League (est. 1948)
December 2003 - Volume 56 Number 2
http://radiodx.com
N.Z. RADIO
DX
LEAGUE
Contribution deadline for next issue is Wed 7th January 2004 PO Box 3011, Auckland
CONTENTS
REGULAR COLUMNS
Bandwatch Under 9
3
with Ken Baird
Bandwatch Over 9
9
FRONT COVER
Radio New Zealand 10th anniversary QSL card
1958.
From the (late) Cleve Costello Collection, NZRDXL
Archives
with Andy McQueen
English in Time Order
13
with Yuri Muzyka
Shortwave Report
16
with Ian Cattermole
Shortwave Mailbag
21
with Laurie Boyer
Utilities
22
with Evan Murray
TV/FM
23
with Adam Claydon
Broadcast news/DX
26
with Tony King
US X Band List
29
with Tony King
AUS X Band List
30
with Tony King
ADCOM News
35
with Bryan Clark
Branch News
38
with Chief Editor
Marketsquare
Ladders
39
47
with Stu Forsyth
OTHER
RNZI Freq Schedule
History Material
by Jerry Berg
IRCA Mexican Log
Juelich photos
15
31
33
34
Radio Free Zimbabwe
40
by Douglas Rogers
(The Guardian newspaper)
Lord of the Rungs
by David Ricquish
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
Another year is almost over and I would like to
thank all the sub-editors for the great job they do
each month in helping me to bring the magazine
to you.
Thank you to Paul Ormandy, who is taking a break
from editing the Unofficial Radio pages.
Thank you to the members who have supported
the DX Times by contributing notes to the various
sub-editors or contributing articles during the year.
If any member has some radio related articles that
they think other members might be interested in,
please contact me, either by post to Editor, NZ DX
Times, P.O. Box 3011, Auckland or by email to
[email protected]
I wish all members a safe and happy time during
this festive season and into the New Year.
73’s
Mark Nicholls
Chief Editor, NZ DX Times.
44
PAGE 2
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Ken Baird, Christchurch
Please note that all frequencies should be in Kilohertz and, time in UTC ( = GMT = UT), #
indicates reception out of NZ, initials in Bold indicates report sent. For reasons of accuracy
some positive ID from the station heard is desirable, otherwise the ID of the station heard
should be shown as tentative. Similarly for languages - either IDed, Presumed or Unid. Also,
would you please add the date of logging to your information.
UTC
Country, Station, Programme, & Reception Details
kHz
3235 2326 BRAZIL, R Guaruja Paulista vocals and MA with Portuguese talk, ID, ads,
jingles and TCs, poor/fair but // 5054 booming in - # RADF
3260 0908 PNG, R Madang fair in EE with weather – AJS 7/11
3280 0800 ECUADOR, LV del Napo fair with Spanish music, no ID heard, other relig
prgmming – AJS 27/11
0905 ECUADOR, LV del Napo (tent) fair/good in Spanish and vernac with relig
prgm, lively Andean music, 0923 then more relig, ads, MA/FA – KVB 23/11
3310
0935 BOLIVIA, R Mosoj Chaski with long talk in Quechua followed by vocals, ID
and announcements after song, fair - # RADF 4/11
3315
0020 INDIA, AIR Bhopal open carrier until flute IS 0023 followed by brief vocal at
0025 and announcements in Hindi at 0026, 0030 Hindi news// 4820 &
4860 at s/on, poor - # RADF 3/11
3325 0800 PNG bandscan with Tok Pisin broadcasts clearly audible on 3325, 3335,
3260, 3365, 3375 at or around 0800 – DN 16/11
2156
INDONESIA, RRI Palankaraya fade out FA with Indonesian talk, SCI at 2159
followed by news, fair but mainly poor – RADF 3/11
3340 0310
HONDURAS, R Misiones Internaionales HRMI with mix of Spanish talks and
music, 0422 EE ID, freq announcements and San Bernardino address,
repeated before Spanish ID etc given then back to vocals, poor - # RAD 14/11
3345 0300 STH AFRICA, Channel Africa open with choral anthem followed by EE ID
and freq , news and sports recap at 0319, poor with QRN // 9770 good - # RAD 14/11
0320 STH AFRICA, Channel Africa (Presumed) with discussion on jobs in Sth Africa,
fair but fading fast, also heard 4/11 at 2151 - # RADF 3/11
2153
INDONESIA, RRI Ternate (Presumed) group singing until off at top of hour,
very poor - # RADF 3/11
3365 0955 PNG, R Milne Bay (tent) fair in EE with pop music, relig talk, NBC natl news
and weather – KVB 6/11
3365 2340 BRAZIL, R Cultura Araraqyara with MA in Portuguese over movie theme
followed by jingle and ID, fair - # RADF 3/11
3945 0900 JAPAN, R Tampa with s/off in Japanese, ID – AJS 8/11
4386.6 0715
PERU, R Imperio fair in Spanish (tip from David Norrie) – IC 24/11
4386.6 0718
PERU, R Imperio fair/good, even though in broad daylight here in NZ, with
some-one addressing crowd with applause every few minutes. Thanks to
Dave Valko for tip – DN 16/11
0948 PERU, R Imperio with YL, OM with Spanish relig talk to live audience, 1004
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 3
DECEMBER 2003
4386.6 0954
1043
4387
0653
4480
2145
4747
0859
4753.4 1154
4754.3 0002
4770
4775
0510
2345
4781.4 1008
4790
0002
4790
0843
4815
0229
4815
1040
4820
0026
4824.4 1026
4830
0007
4832
1045
4845
0210
4860
0026
4870
1144
4902
0210
back to studio for ID and more talks, at 1011 returned to live show, poor/fair
with deep fades - # RAD 16/11
PERU, R Imperio with a good signal with LV de Salvation prgm with TC, day
& date, 2 quick R Imperio IDs, anmts, all with guitar music in background.
Back to Salvacion 1001 then another local break 1013 with ID etc - # JB 22/11
PERU, R Imperio with man preaching in Spanish followed by flutes, ID, and
more music, poor - # RADF 3/11
PERU, R Imperio fair in Spanish but heavy ute QRM, “La Palabra” prgm.
0659 music, 0701 MA with ID – KVB 29/11
CHINA, China Natl Radio with MA/FA talking in Chinese poor but // 5030
poor and 7935 fair - # RADF 3/11
PERU, R Huanta 2000 (tent) good in Quechua, MA, variety of Andean music,
TX off suddenly at 0908 – KVB 17/11
INDONESIA, RRI Makassar in Indonesian with talk by OM and YL until SCI
and Jakarta news at 1200, fair and // 4870 noted. Noted again at 2135
with good signal - # RADF 2/11
BRAZIL, R Educacion Rural with music prgm with MA , talks, TCs and songs,
fair/good - # RADF4/11
NIGERIA, R Nigeria with EE news, good but ute QRM at times, ID 0522 – # BCI 16/10
BRAZIL, R Congonhas with mix of pops and MA with Portuguese talks, ID
2357, fair with swisher QRM - # RADF 3/11
ECUADOR, R Oriental man with ID, ads, TC and Latin vocals, fair - # RADF 3/11
India, air Chennai with Hindi vocals and Tamil talk, close down
announcements at 0044 over flute music, poor/fair - # RADF 3/11
INDONESIA, RRI Fak Fak (tent) fair in Indonesian with Koran, Trad music, pop
music past 1005 – KVB 12/11
MEXICO, XERTA (Tent) freq announcements in Spanish followed by prgm of
romantic ballads, off suddenly - # RADF 3/11
ECUADOR, R El Buen Pastor with long talk by OM in Quechua and Spanish,
music, female vocals - # RADF 4/11
INDIA, AIR Kolkata in Hindi with vocals and TCs at 0030 and Hindi news,
poor - # RADF 3/11
PERU, La Voz de la Selva, OA vocals hosted by OM/YL with Spanish talk, ID,
TC, ads, poor - # RADF 4/11
VENEZUELA, R Tachira with Latin music, ID 0008 followed by more music,
fair/good - # RADF
HONDURAS, R Litoral opened at 1055 with full ID (as HRLW, R Litoral), gave
freq as 4830, relig vocals till past 1100, audio low and echoey, music better # JB 4/11
MAURITANIA, R Mauritanie with long talk in Arabic, vocals from 0245 with
ID followed by recitations, good with RAMADAN sked - # RAD 27/10
INDIA, AIR Delhi in Hindi with vocals until TCs at 0030 followed by Hindi
news poor - # RADF 3/11
INDONESIA, RRI Wamena with music prgm with OM until local ID at 1159
then SCI, Jakarta news 1200, poor/fair // 4753.4 noted - # RADF 3/11
BOLIVIA, R San Miguel with rustic vocals and Spanish announcements, TCs
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 4
DECEMBER 2003
4902.6 0958
4903
0850
4920
4950
4965
0907
1948
0951
4976
2001
4985
0132
5010
5030
0815
0255
2225
5040.1 0932
5040.6 1116
5045
0750
5500
0355
5670
5745
5775
0717
0719
2153
2130
5810
5825
5890
5915
0724
0725
0725
0740
1739
5930
5935
5950
5955
5965
0700
0800
0740
0800
0800
and IDs, poor/fair wit 2 IDs at s/off - # RAD 16/11
BOLIVIA, R San Miguel opened 0958 with talk, ID 1000, drifting a lot. Also
heard on 12/11 - # JB 9/11
BOLIVIA, ??? R Santa Cruz fair in Spanish with long s/on, YL over music,
Ads, rooster, animated MA, songs, talk. On 4/11 mentioned “Santa Ana”, ID
0909 – KVB 6/11
INDIA, AIR Kolkata (pres) on air past sked with continuous music – AJS 21/11
SAO TOME VOA good clear with EE to Africa – # BCI 15/10
PERU, R Santa Monica with Peruvian vocals with TCs, IDs, announcements,
poor - # RADF 3/11
UGANDA, R Uganda with EE news, “Topical Comments” feature at 2006,
with Nairobi, Kenya mailing address – # BCI 15/10
BRAZIL, R Brasil Central with Brazilian pops and Portuguese talk, ads, ID at
0147 and 02000 with freq announcement, fair - # RAD 18/11
BRAZIL, R Brasil Central weak in Portuguese with music prgm – AMQ 23/11
MADAGASCAR, R Madagascar with IS repetitions, weak - # JB 7/11
BURKINA FASO RTV Burkina with French talk and music, ID 2300 and
numerous mentions of Burkina Faso, poor/fair with QRN - # RAD 19/10
ECUADOR, La Voz del Upano with continuous Latin vocals followed by FA
with ID and talk - # RADF 4/11
MYANMAR, R Myanmar fade out, long Myanmar talk by FA with vocals,
poor but fading - # RADF 4/11
BRAZIL, R Guaruja Paulista good with many IDs, jingles, stingers, anmts,
Brazilian music, fades out shortly after 0800 - # JB 21/11
ETHIOPIA, V of Tigray Revolution opening music to OM with ID 0400 and
talk in Amharic followed by flute musicand more talking, poor/fair and //
6350 weak but clear on USB - # RAD 29/10
USA, WWCR with Bro Stair with normal relig prgm, fair – KAB 12/11
USA, WHRI Angel 2 good with usual relig prgm – KAB 12/11
ITALY, European Music Radio (presumed) with pops and snatches of EE no
ID but did hear IRRS ID at 2159 s/off, poor - # RAD 24/10
ITALY, AMIS (European Social Forum) prgm via IRRS good with 3 EE features
on water conservation, AIDS in Uganda, and music. No IDs noted but IRRS
ID at 2230 - # JB 13/11
USA, WYFR good in Spanish with relig prgm – KAB 12/11
USA, WEWN good in EE with catholic relig prgm – KAB 12/11
USA, WYFR good in EE with relig prgm, ID 0730 – KAB 12/11
VATICAN, R Vaticana fair in EE with news then change of language – AJS 13/11
SLOVAKIA, R Slovakia Intl fair/good in EE with OM talking about the
environment, ID at 1742, some QRN // 6055, 7345 the same – CC 25/11
CZECH REP, R Prague with news in French, slight QRM from 5935 – RD 14/11
USA, WWCR good in EE – IC 21/11
TAIWAN, R Taipei Intl v good in EE – IC 19/11
NETHERLANDS, RN good in Dutch – IC 19/11
GERMANY, RVI via DTK good in EE – IC 11/11
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 5
DECEMBER 2003
5990
6020
6025
0901
1840
2157
6030
0710
6035
6040
6050
0900
1831
1840
2106
6055
2054
6060
0650
0924
6065
6070
1835
0906
6080
6090
1827
0912
6120
2100
6135
0900
6139.8 0402
6150
0306
2100
2225
6185
6188
6190
0755
1024
0520
6250
2154
6350
6925
7145
7175
0830
0235
1805
1815
BRAZIL, R Senado good in Portuguese lively announcer – AJS 7/11
MADAGASCAR, RN fair in EE with music and Vox Humana – KAB 16/11
PHILIPPINES, VOA with ID at s/on fair and clear but overtaken by R Budapest
at its s/on - # JB 26/11
GERMANY, Sudestrundfunk with rock & pop music prgm in German with
talks, ads, and morning prgm format, ID and jingle at 0730 followed by YL
with news, poor - # RAD 10/11
USA, R Marti good with MA – RD 6/11
SAO TOME, VOA poor in EE with comment on news – KAB 10/11
MOROCCO, VOA good in EE with comment on Euro/US relations – KAB 16/11
NIGERIA, R Nigeria, Ibadan in EE with talk about Ramadam, ID 2118 followed
by more taslk about democracy in Nigeria , group singing, ID, possible
anthem then off, poor - # RADF 3/11
RWANDA, R Rwanda noted under Slovakia with group singing and in clear
after Slovakia s/off, poor/fair - # RADF 3/11
BRAZIL, R Tupi with relig prgm in Portuguese, full ID at 0700, constant freq
movement noticed - # JB 12/11
ARGENTINA, RAE fair/good in Spanish with OM speaking, a little distorted
// 15345 better – CC 4/11
SWEDEN, R Sweden poor in EE with 60 Degrees Nth and Sports Scan – KAB 10/11
CHILE, R Voz Critiana fair/good in Spanish with OM speaking, clear ID, a
little distorted – CC 4/11
AUSTRALIA, R Australia poor in EE with talk on minorities – KAB 10/11
ANGUILLA, Carib. Beacon fair/good with Dr Gene Scott, steady background
noise – CC 4/11
GERMANY, R Taipei Intl via DTK, weak but clear in Spanish – IC 11/11
BOLIVIA, R Santa Cruz good in Spanish with OM with ID, and Latin music – CC 4/11
COLOMBIA, R Melodia with prgm of opera with Spanish announcements
and IDs, very good - # RADSF 3/11
IRAN, VOIRI presumed with Koran recitations in presumed Farsi prior to s/
off - # RAD 10/11
TURKISH CYPRUS, no sign of R Bayrak despite regular checks, just open
carrier with no audio, Austria on 6155 didn’t help either! – # BCI
TAIWAN?? CBS-?? Good carrier at 2225 followed by ad string at 2228
opening, ID 2230, talk in Chinese, good signal not heard before - # JB 8/11
MEXICO, R Educacion v good in Spanish – IC 21/11
PERU, R Oriente lively prgm of OA vocals, OM with TC and ID at 1031, fair - # RADF 3/11
UNKNOWN LOCATION, CRI poor/fair in EE with “Reports from Developing
Countries” prgm., ID 0530 – KVB 30/11
EQUATORIAL GUINEA R Nacional Malabo with music to 2159 then ID and 3
Time Pips, news in Spanish, fair but dropped out - # RADF 2/11
HAWAII, AFN Pearl Harbour on USB in EE good with sports talk – AMQ 24/11
PIRATE, (Nth Am) Capt Ron Shortwave on USB fair/good with e-mail address # RADF 4/11
GERMANY, D Welle good in Russian, ID 1810 – KAB 11/11
GERMANY, D Welle v good in Farsi to Iran, ID 1820 – KAB 11/11
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 6
DECEMBER 2003
7185
1820
7260
7280
7285
7315
7380
7380
1836
1808
0330
0710
1300
2155
7385
0328
0329
2244
7508
0815
BANGLADESH, Bangla Betar fair in EE with comment on local politics, ID
1821 – KAB 11/11
STH AFRICA, AWR poor in EE with news and comment on Africa – KAB 10/11
VIETNAM, V of Vietnam fair in EE with local news – KAB 10/11
GERMANY, V of Croatia via DTK weak in Croatian – IC 11/11
USA, WHRI fair in EE – IC 12/11
CIS, R Netherlands good in EE on this new freq, 7375 subject to severe QRM # JSB 14/11
CLANDESTINE, V of Biafra Intl with end of EE commentary with ID, followed
by vocals and ID and closedown, fair - # RAD 18/10
USA, WRMI with Voice of Natl Assn of SWBCers with end of Wavescan, WRMI
and VONASB IDs , into WYFR prgmimg. Similar WRMI/VONASB anmt at 0355
close, into IDT Radio at 0358, very good signal - # JB 16/11
USA, WRMI, v of the NASB with Jeff White with Natl Assoc of SW Broadcasters
ID and announcements about special prgm in DRM and analogue, fair,
wanting reception reports - # RAD 2/11
CHINA, Xizang PBS Lhasa, Tibet presumed the one with Chinese music
and talk in listed Tibetan, poor - # RADF 4/11
PUERTO RICO, AFN fair in EE on USB with NHL scores – AMQ 24/11
Logging of the month
goes to Kelvin Brayshaw for R Imperio, PERU on 4387 kHz using a FRG7.
Logging of the month Results for 2003 are
are:
David Norrie
Paul Ormandy
Andrew Sunde
Ian Cattermole
Kelvin Brayshaw
2
5
2
1
7
Loggings of the month
Loggings of the month
Loggings of the month
Loggings of the month
Loggings of the month
The award for Loggings of the Month for Below 9 MHz
goes to Kelvin Brayshaw on his trusty FRG7.
Logging of the Year
goes to Paul Ormandy for ARDS Humpty Doo, AUSTRALIA on 5549.9. Paul is the only NZer
to report this station to Bandwatch
My thanks to all the contributors over the year, with a good variety of loggings every month.
For those interested, schedules of EE Broadcasts for B03 are available from :
www.fineware-swl.com/schedules/TextListing.html produced by Mark J Fine, dated 21/11/03,
and www.primetimeshortwave.com produced by Daniel Sampson, VB03V05 dated 20/11/03,
16 pages. Both of these sites provide very useful information which is updated regularly.
Have a great Christmas and a happy and successful New Year. 73’s, Ken Baird
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 7
DECEMBER 2003
CONTRIBUTORS FOR THIS MONTH
AJS – Andrew Sunde, Ohai, ICF 2001, 3.5MHz dipole, 40m wire :
AMQ – Andy McQueen, Brightwater, Sony 6800 :
BCI – Bryan Clark on holiday in Italy, ICF7600G, Short wire :
CC – Cliff Couch, Paraparaumu, ATS 803A, 60m horizontal loop, 32m E/W wire :
DN – David Norrie, Whitford Forest, Auckland, AOR 7030, fence post antenna :
IC – Ian Catttermole, Blenheim, JRC NRD535, T2FD and Alpha Delta sloper :
JB – Jerry Berg, Lexington, MA, USA, R8, 130ft longwire, 19 & 90m dipoles :
JSB – Jon Standingbear, Beaumont, USA, NRD 345, Icom R75, 80ft longwire and dipoles :
KAB - Ken Baird, Christchurch, R5000, Sangean 909, 18m Wire, SW Eavesdropper :
KVB – Kelvin Brayshaw, Levin, FRG7, ICF2001, Horizontal loops:
RAD – Richard D’Angelo Wyomissing USA, Ten-Tec RX-340, R8B, Lowe HF 150, Alpha
Delta sloper, RF Systems mini windom, Datong FL3, JPS ANC4 :
RADF – Richard D’Angelo, French Creek Dxpedition, USA, Ten-Tec RX-340, R8B, 500ft wire
north, 200ft wire south, Datong FL3 :
RD – Ray Davey, Oamaru, R1000, 30m Sloper .
Contributions to this column may be sent to PO Box 3011, Auckland or K A Baird, 10
Sarabande Avenue, Christchurch, 5. Ph: +64 3 352 6455, e-mail to ka.baird@ xtra.co.nz
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 8
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Andy McQueen, Brightwater
Wishing all readers A Very Merry Christmas from Brightwater. All times shown are UTC 13
hours behind NZ daylight Savings Time.
KHZ
9425
9495
9510
9515
TIME
1750
1916
0645
2024
9520
9535
9540
9545#
1730
1940
2320
0430
9570# 1345
9580# 1300
9590# 0415
9595
9600
9720
2005
1925
0256
9730
9755
2030
1730
9815
9820
9840
9840
9855
9885
11600
11600
0400
1700
0630
0650
0418
0415
0700
0729
11685
11690
11695
1900
0740
0955
11715
1815
COUNTRY STATION & PGM DETAILS INITIALS
INDIA AIR GOS via Bangalore Good in EE with Billy Joel Music 21/11 AMQ
GERMANY IBRA via DTK. Good in African dialect. 2/12 IC
ROMANIA RRI. Good in EE. 1/12 IC
ITALY RAI Int. Good in EE with 15 min segment about Islamic terrorists Doctors
& Nurses still in Iraq then other news Into PP at 2050 25/11 RFK
GERMANY IBRA via DTK. Poor in Swahili. Severe QRM from RFE 25/11 IC
THAILAND R Thailand Strong in EE with talk about Thai exports. Id at 1942 13/11 CC
SPAIN REE Fair in SS with discussion pgm // 11945 stronger 22/11 CC
GERMANY D/Welle Africa Sce Good in EE with pgm about Congo’s rich
natural resource 28/11 DWW
CHINA CRI Good in EE with story on Aids in China 29/11 DWW
AUSTRALIA R Australia Good in EE with News about Palestine Prime Minister 29/11 DWW
CANADA R Nederland via Sackville V/good in EE with Nx about troops in
Iraq 28/11 DWW
SPAIN REE. Poor in EE. Severe QRM. 25/11 IC
GERMANY IBB/VOA via DTK. Fair in Turkman. Some EE. Off 2000. 26/11 IC
TUNISIA RTV Tunisienne Good in AA with choir singing // 12005 has bad
QRN 24/11 CC
VIETNAM V. Of Vietnam. Opens in EE. Poor with QRM. 20/11 IC
GERMANY SRI via Julich Good in EE with SwissInfo with Swiss airline Drug
and Alcohol abuse Consumer products and Nigerians wanting frozen bank
accounts unfrozen 23/11 RFK
GERMANY R .Africa Int. via DTK. Fair in FF. 9/11 IC
GERMANY Sagalee Oromo. via DTK. Good in Amharic. 15/11 IC
GERMANY AWR via Julich Good in EE ‘Voice of Hope’ then pgm for Africa 25/11 RFK
GERMANY SWR via DTK. Ex in EE. Into FF at 0700. 12/11 IC
EGYPT R Cairo ? Good in AA with spoken pgm 24/11 CC
BOTSWANA VOA. VG in EE. 9/11 IC
BULGARIA R. Bulgaria. V/Good in FF. // 13600 also VG. 17/11 IC
BULGARIA R Bulgaria Excellent in EE with S/on at 0730 News mainly items
on Bulgaria & Romania then item on Opera star with music and talk.17/11 RFK
AUSTRALIA Voice Int. Darwin Good in EE with relgious pgm and Id 24/11 AMQ
GERMANY R. Africa Int. via DTK. Good in FF. 10/11 IC
NEW ZEALAND RNZI Rangitaiki Good in EE with Sports story about corruption
in Pakistani Cricket. Then Nx by Roger Gacoigne at 10.00 21/11 AMQ
FRANCE Libyan Jamahiriya via Issodun Good in AA Chimes time signal
and into EE at 1915 Very hard to understand Mainly African items At 1922
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 9
DECEMBER 2003
into FF 17/11 RFK
EGYPT R Cairo ? Fair in AA with spoken pgm and local Mx some distorted
signal 24/11 CC
11735# 2335 THAILAND VOA Udon relay Id as VOA Special English, news items until
feature “American Stories” at 2345. Off at top of the hour with standard
closing ID: “This is the Voice of America, Washington, DC signing off.” Fair. 7/11 RAD
11780 1000
TAIWAN Herald Broadcasting relay with C. Science Sentinel Radio edition
with guests experiences At 1030 Bible readings 25/11 RFK
11785# 1900
GT BRITAIN R. Ndeke Luka via Merlin Not very good on new frequency, and
nowhere near previous 15545. 7/11 JB
11785 2115
GUAM KTWR Opens in Mandarin. Fair. 14/11 IC
11805.15# 0657 GEORGIA. R. Georgia Fluttery signal in GG Id at 0700 Mainly talk pgm and
some Mx The first time I have heard their 25mb channel. Should be more
usable with better propagation. They were fairly regular on 5040.4/11 JB 4/11
11815# 2340 BRAZIL R Brasil Central Religious talk in PP with Mx to 2355 Id and frequency
announcements Fair and noted //4985.28/10 RAD
11830# 2330 BRAZIL R Anhanguerra, Soccer commentary by man in PP with jingles &
Id’s. Fair.6/11 RAD
11905 0854 NTH MARIANAS ISLANDS RFA? V/good in CC with Pop Mx pgm 25/11 KVB
11905 1745
SRI LANKA R Farda Good in AA with News 22/11 AMQ
11905 1904
SRI LANKA R Sawa Good in AA with Mid east Pop Mx and Nx Id 1910 25/11 KVB
11910 0158
VATICAN CITY Vatican Radio Fair in SS with spoken pgm Slight noise // 9605
weaker 20/11 CC
11925 0410
BRAZIL R Bandeirantes Weak in PP with talk pgm // 9645 weaker still 24/11 CC
11945 0530 SOUTH AFRICA AWR Good in FF with Multi language Id’s and mail address
Moon River theme often 20/11 RFK
11955 0900 AUSTRALIA. Voice Int. Poor in EE. 21/11 IC
11990 1939
KUWAIT R Kuwait Good in EE discussing Kuwait and the Media
13605 1445
GERMANY Pan American BC. Weak but clear in EE. Sundays. 9/11 IC
13620 1447
KUWAIT R Kuwait Good in AA with spoken pgm // 15110 same 9/11 CC
13655 1435
CANADA RCI Fair in EE with talk on constructing ice hockey rinks 21/11 CC
13700 0710
BULGARIA. R. Bulgaria. Good in SS. Some QRM. 17/11 IC
13710 1425
INDIA AIR Strong in EE Id and Mx distorted signal // 9690 the same 6/11 CC
13790 1826
CANADA RVI relay via Sackville? Excellent in Flemish to past 1906 Many RVI
Id’s Talk and Music on Show Business in Flanders Musical Festival and
1905 and on and on about drinking and alcohol 19/11 (Was that a report on
Christchurch on a Saturday Night? - Ed) RFK
13795 2326 INDIA AIR Good in Hindi with indigenous singing and sitar Mx 22/11 CC
13800 0937
NORWAY R Denmark Good in Danish with spoken pgm // 18950 weaker
4/11 CC ( Note this station is closing at the end of the year 4/11 CC
15020 1008
INDIA AIR GOS Fair in EE with Nx and comment on India/Pakistan relations
& terrorism, Bilateral peace talks possible next year
15065# 1350
PAKISTAN R Pakistan Urdu talks followed by Pakistani vocals. At 1400,
three time pips and the woman announcer with an Id prior to the news.
Poor.18/10 RAD
11725
0422
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 10
DECEMBER 2003
15135
15190
0930
1000
15230
0416
15265
2045
15275# 1127
15330
15345
15410
15555
1448
0242
2030
1749
15630 1441
15650# 1455
15770
0844
17505
1430
17565
17740
17765
17690
17835#
0921
0018
0020
0905
2235
17860
2329
17870
0827
17875 0845
21465 0808
21610# 1405
21630
0813
CHINA CRI Good in Mandarin CC S/on Id and Nx // 17860 slightly worse 17/11 KVB
SINGAPORE D/Welle via Kranji Interval signal then insipid S/on in EE News
on Flash flood in Indonesia then Newslink for Asia Pacific covering Indonesia
Georgia elections and differences over Iraq etc 4/11 RFK
CUBA R Habana Cuba Fair/good in SS with local Mx and refs to ‘programa
especial La Tropical’ At 0457 Anthem and Id at 0500 23/11 KVB
NEW ZEALAND RNZI Good in EE relaying Radio Sport with Rugby World Cup
progress 27/11 AMQ
GERMANY D/Welle carrying R Multikulti Sunday Romany-language pgm
DW I/Sig at 1127, Id for R. Multikulti and D/W at 1130, Nx in Romany, then
talk with nice interludes of Mx. Contact info for Multikulti and D/W at 1157,
D/W IS once at 1200 and off. Good signal. JB
GUAM KTWR Weak in EE and badly distorted Music and spoken pgm 21/11 CC
ARGENTINA R Nacional Fair in SS discussion , anthem and S/off Id at 0247 10/11 KVB
SRI LANKA D/Welle Good in EE with Inside Europe pgm 27/11 AMQ
SWITZERLAND SRI Good in EE talking about Swiss healthcare Id 1751 /9755
QRM 25/11 CC
GREECE FTH Fair in Greek with spoken pgm // 9420 less clear 9/11 CC
GERMANY Pan American Broadcasting Various brokered religious program
including Waymarks and World Bible Mission for 15 minute segments. Poorfair.19/10 RAD
INDIA AIR Fair in Indonesian? with I/sig, S/on and dodgey mic. switch made
hesitant delivery of News // 17875 25/11 KVB
SWEDEN R Sweden Good in EE with 60 Degrees North pgm // 18960 much
weaker 6/11 CC
CHINA CPBS Beijing 1st Network V/good in CC with talk and ads //17605 3/11 KVB
PHILIPPINES VOA Tinang Good in EE with News Now pgm 2/11 AMQ
PHILIPPINES VOA Good in CC with spoken pgm 2/11 AMQ
CHINA CRI Good in EE with Nx of Arafat ready for peace talks Id 0909 3/11 KVB
EL SALVADOR R Imperial SS talk followed by continuous vocals until 2246 Id
and more music. 2325 Further Id at 2331. Signal poor - fair with deep
fades mixing with RCI at tune in but in the clear later. 24/10 RAD
RWANDA D/Welle Poor but improving in GG Talk and classical Mx interludes
22/11 KVB ( I know it says that it shows that in current PWBR but it is unusual
to hear Africa around midday in NZ - Ed)
CYPRUS BBC Fair in unidentified European language I/sig, Id and then
discussion 25/11 KVB
INDIA AIR Good in Indonesian with Ii/sig, Id and News 3/11 KVB
PAKISTAN R Pakistan Poor/Fair with Nx in EE then into Urdu pgm 25/11 AJS
SPAIN REE Fair in SS with “Aqui Espana,” new Sunday pgm for Spanish
soldiers in Iraq mainly interviews and conversation, plus a couple of pop
vocals and some comedy before a big audience. Pgm Id at 1440, pips at
1500, 16/11 JB
MOROCCO R Sawa Fair in AA but subject to slight echo. Pop Mx pgm Id
0815 25/11 KVB
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 11
DECEMBER 2003
21660
0821
SINGAPORE BBCWS Good in EE with talk on developing Aids vaccine in East
Africa 26/11 KVB
Thanks very much to all contributors for this month. and throughout the year. Stations
reported are indicated by the contributors initials underlined in Bold eg: AMQ The use of the
# symbol is to indicate station reported outside of New Zealand. Please note I have changed
the location of this symbol to beside the frequency.
The winning logging for DECEMBER
is 9885 kHz VOA Botswana contibuted by Ian Catermole
.
Your contributions are most welcome either to the email address above or Postal via PO Box
3011 Auckland or direct to me at 85 Waimea West Road Brightwater Nelson.
73’s
Andy McQueen
SHORTWAVE EXCHANGE
AJS Andrew Sunde Ohai Southland Sony ICF 2001 5 Mhz dipole and 40m wire /AMQ
AMQ Andy
CC Cliff Couch Paraparaumu
McQueen Brightwater Sony 6800 and 1 m telescopic whip /CC
DWW Dave Weronka
Sangean ATS 803A with 60m horizontal loop/ & 32m E/W random wire /DWW
Benson Nth Carolina USA Grundig YB400PE and R Shack DX375 Sangean ATS 404 with Long
Wire 39’ / IC Ian Catermole Blenheim JRC NRD 535 T2FD and Alpha Delta antenna JB Jerry
Berg USA KVB Kelvin Brayshaw Levin FRG-7 & Sony ICF 2001 60m & 40m horizontal loops/
RAD Richard D’Angelo Wyomissing, PA USA & on DXpedition Drake R-8B Lowe HF-150 Alpha Delta DX Sloper RF Systems Mini-Windom Datong FL3 JPS ANC-4 / RD Ray Davey Oamaru
Kenwood R1000 & Sloper 30m RFK Ron Killick Christchurch Sony 6800 & 40m long wire
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 12
DECEMBER 2003
english in time order
Compiled by Yuri (George) Muzyka, Auckland
Time Order summary of Ken’s Under 9MHz & Andy’s Over 9MHz BandWatch columns.
Please remember to include the date and signal strength with all your loggings and send
them to the Under/Over 9MHz Bandwatch column editors, thanks.
73 - Yuri, ZL1GYM ([email protected] http://www.linradio.com/sources.htm)
***SIGNAL STRENGTHS*** e = Excellent; g = Good; f = Fair; p = Poor.
Overseas contributors now have “#”s around their name initials (eg #ABC#).
Time
Frequencies
Station
Station
Log
DXer
Date
Name
(UTC)
(kHz)
Name
Country
0018
17740g
VOA
USA
2/11
AMQ
0328-0355
7385g
WRMI
USA
16/11
#JB#
0415
9590g
R Nederland
NETHERLANDS 28/11 #DWW#
0415
9885g
VOA
USA
9/11
IC
0430
9545g
D/Welle
GERMANY
28/11 #DWW#
0510-0522
4770g
R Nigeria
NIGERIA
16/10 #BCI#
0520-0530
6190f
CRI
CHINA
30/11 KVB
0630
9840g
AWR
GERMANY?
25/11 RFK
0645
9510g
RRI
ROMANIA
1/12
IC
0650-0700
9840e
SWR
GERMANY?
12/11
IC
0710
7315f
WHRI
USA
12/11
IC
0725
5825g
WEWN
USA
12/11
KAB
0725-0730
5890g
WYFR
USA
12/11
KAB
0729-0730
11600e
R Bulgaria
BULGARIA
17/11
RFK
0740
5890f
R Vaticana
VATICAN
13/11
AJS
0740
5950g
R Taipei Int
TAIWAN
19/11
IC
0800
5935g
WWCR
USA
21/11
IC
0800
5965g
RVI
BELGUIM
11/11
IC
0808
21465f
R Pakistan
PAKISTAN
25/11 AJS
0815
7508(USB)f
AFN
USA
24/11 AMQ
0821
21660g
BBCWS
UK
26/11 KVB
0830
6350(USB)g
AFN
USA
24/11 AMQ
0900
11955p
Voice Int
AUSTRALIA
21/11
IC
0905-0909
17690g
CRI
CHINA
3/11
KVB
0908
3260f
R Madang
PNG
7/11
AJS
0955
3365f
R Milne Bay (tent) PNG
6/11
KVB
0955-1000
11695g
RNZI
NEW ZEALAND 21/11
AMQ
1000
15190
D/Welle
GERMANY
4/11
RFK
1008
15020f
AIR
INDIA
?
1300
7380g
R Netherlands NETHERLANDS 14/11
#JSB#
1300
9580g
R Australia
AUSTRALIA
29/11 #DWW#
1345
9570g
CRI
CHINA
29/11 #DWW#
1425
9690e:13710e
AIR
INDIA
6/11
CC
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 13
DECEMBER 2003
1430
17505g:18960p R Sweden
SWEDEN
1435
13655f
RCI
CANADA
1445
13605p
Pan American BC GERMANY?
1448
15330p
KTWR
GUAM
1730
9755g
SRI
SWITZERLAND
1739-1742 5915g:6055g:7345g R Slovakia Int
SLOVAKIA
1749-1751
9755:15555g
SRI
SWITZERLAND
1750
9425g
AIR
INDIA
1808
7280f
V of Vietnam
VIETNAM
1820-1821
7185f
Bangla Betar
BANGLADESH
1827
6080p
R Australia
AUSTRALIA
1831
6035p
VOA
USA
1835
6065p
R Sweden
SWEDEN
1836
7260p
AWR
STH AFRICA?
1840
6020f
RN
NETHERLANDS
1840
6040g
VOA
USA
1900
11685g
Voice Int
AUSTRALIA
1939
11990g
R Kuwait
KUWAIT
1940-1942
9535e
R Thailand
THAILAND
1948
4950g
VOA
USA
2001-2006
4976
R Uganda
UGANDA
2005
9595p
REE
SPAIN
2024-2050
9515g
RAI Int
ITALY
2030
9730p
V. of Vietnam
VIETNAM
2030
15410g
D/Welle
GERMANY
2045
15265g
RNZI
NEW ZEALAND
2106-2118
6050p
R Nigeria
NIGERIA
2130
5775g
IRRS
ITALY
2155
7380f
V of Biafra Int
CLANDESTINE
2335-2345
11735f
VOA
USA
6/11
21/11
9/11
21/11
23/11
25/11
25/11
21/11
10/11
11/11
10/11
10/11
10/11
10/11
16/11
16/11
24/11
13/11
15/10
15/10
25/11
25/11
20/11
27/11
27/11
3/11
13/11
18/10
7/11
CC
CC
IC
CC
RFK
CC
CC
AMQ
KAB
KAB
KAB
KAB
KAB
KAB
KAB
KAB
AMQ
?
CC
#BCI#
#BCI#
IC
RFK
IC
AMQ
AMQ
#RADF#
#JB#
#RAD#
#RAD#
Change of Mailing address for all stations using the SRS Sweden maildrop address
Here is a very important news from Jonny at the SRS Sweden :
The new adress for all stations using the mailservice of the SRS Sweden is :
SRS
-stationnameOstra Porten 49
44254 Ytterby
Sweden
The streetnumber has change from 29 to 49 !!!
(via Alex Warner POWER 41/HCDX)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 14
DECEMBER 2003
Updated RNZI Schedule 9th December 2003. Effective 21 December 2003 - 28 March 2004
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 15
DECEMBER 2003
0400
0759
0800
1059
1100
1259
1300
1750
1751
1950
1951
2237
2238
0358
P O Box 123, Wellington, New Zealand
Phone:+(64 4) 4741 437 Facsimile +(64 4) 4741 433
E-mail address: [email protected]
Web Address: www.rnzi.com
15265
17675
-
9870
–
–
15530
–
11980
9885
-
–
15340
kHz
16
19
25
49
19
31
Metre
Band
19
0'
0'
35'
0'
325'
0'
0'
Azimuth
All Pacific, also heard on the USA west coast
All Pacific, also heard in Europe
NE Pacific, Fiji, Kiribati, Samoa, Cook Islands
NW Pacific, Bougainville, Timor, Asia,
Europe
All Pacific
All Pacific, also heard Europe, and mid-west
USA
All Pacific, also heard mid-west USA
Primary Target
21 December 2003 – 28 March 2004
FREQUENCY SCHEDULE
-
UTC
RADIO NEW ZEALAND INTERNATIONAL
TE REO IRIRANGI O AOTEAROA, O TE MOANA-NUI-A-KIWA
[email protected]
Compiled by Ian Cattermole, Blenheim
ALASKA:
KNLS November 30, 2003 to December 28, 2003.
0800 9795 English.
0900 7365 Russian. 1000 7365 Mandarin. 1100 7365 Russian.
1200 7365 Mandarin. 1300 9780 English. 1400 7355 Mandarin. 1500 7355 Mandarin
1600 7355 Mandarin. 1700 7355 Russian .
English language frequencies are new. (WORLD OF RADIO)
B03 SCHEDULES:
HFCC Posts Winter Schedules
The High Frequency Coordination Committee has finally loaded the B03 file of shortwave
frequency information on their website: http://www.hfcc.org/data
Knowing that not all shortwave broadcasters presently allow their transmitter locations and
frequencies to be posted thereon, I now regard the HFCC information with a bit less interest
than in years past. At least the file can be used to determine antenna azimuth headings for
the frequencies that are posted in the file. (Richard Howard, USA, DX LISTENING DIGEST)
DENMARK:
Radio Denmark to cease shortwave broadcasts.
DR Radio and the Ministry of Culture has been negotiating about the closure of our short
wave service. Thursday, Nov. 6, it was finally decided that Denmark will leave short wave by
the end of this year. Kind Regards, Erik Kˆie. DR Radio.
DENMARK:
World Music Radio Plan Return in December
World Music Radio is planning to resume operation in December 2003 on 5815 and 15810
kHz. according to info on its web site. (WMR first went on the air in 1967 from the Netherlands,
from where broadcasting took place until August 1973. Later programmes from WMR have
been carried through the facilities of Radio Andorra (in 1976 and (1980), Radio Milano International (1982-1983) and Radio Dublin (1983-1989). (In 1997 WMR came back on the air from
31 May to 24 August from a new HQ in Denmark and from powerful transmitters in South
Africa giving a truly worldwide coverage but with Africa as the main target area. (HCDX.
INDIA:
All India Radio to launch worldwide news channel
All India Radio is to start its own round-the-clock news channel next year, which will be
beamed around the world on shortwave. The new service will be launched on 2 April 2004.
Prasar Bharati Chief Executive Officer K S Sarma said that the channel was not being launched
on 1 April ‘for reasons that do not need to be specified’. (RN NEWS)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 16
DECEMBER 2003
ITALY:
RADIO SIX TO DEBUT ON SHORTWAVE.
Greetings! It’s now around 31 years since your SUNDAY SHOW aired on Radio Six, broadcasting to nowhere from my bedroom in Ardrossan. Much has happened since then, but
glossing over thirty odd years we leap into 2003 with the news that the success of Radio Six
as an Internet station playing unpublished bands and musicians to listeners in 55 countries
so far has led us to dip a toe into HF waters. (Probably a daft time to do it given current space
weather conditions, but nobody ever accused us of being sensible.) Our second annual
RECORD OF THE YEAR show - with the top 20 songs from the past 52 weeks of play lists, voted
for by our listeners - will not only air on our webstreams but also on 13840 kHz via the Nexus
20 kW rig in Milan. Transmission dates: Saturday 27th and Sunday 28th December 2003
Times: 0930 - 1030 GMT (UTC) Tune in if you can; spread the word in any way you see fit and
send us a reception report - there will be pretty commemorative QSLs to celebrate Radio Six
International finally making it on to the airwaves after 40 years in existence! TONY CURRIE,
Programme Director, radio six international. (Media Network via DXLD) ( Should be able to
catch this one here. ED.)
Address for the above: Radio Six International, P.O. Box 600, Glascow G41 5SH. Scotland.
e-mail [email protected] This off their website (ED)
LITHUANIA:
New broadcasts from Radio Ezra Thursday, October 02 2003
Radio Ezra is pleased to announce a new series of weekly broadcasts commencing on Sunday 30th November 2003. The broadcasts will be targeted towards Europe, North Africa and
the Middle East in the 41 meter band on (7560 kHz between 19:00 and 19:30 UTC via the
Sitkunai transmitter in Lithuania. (Radio Ezra is the Radio Voice of the World Karaite Movement and the first and only counter-missionary radio station in the world. Reception reports
are very welcome and a QSL certificate will be issued to any (correct reports. Due to limited
funding there is unfortunately no PO Box contact and reception reports can only be sent by
either fax or e-mail, details of which will be read out on air and may also be found on the
(station’s website. Http://www.radioezra.com (To commemorate Radio Ezra’s new image
and purpose, ten special QSL cards will be issued to the first ten reception reports received.
Thank you. (John D. Hill (Station Owner)
MALTA:
Voice of the Mediterranean closing down.
Maltese-based international broadcaster Voice of the Mediterranean (VOM) closed down
its Internet broadcasts yesterday amid allegations of wrongdoing at the station, which have
been denied by its management. The shortwave transmissions are continuing for now, but
are expected to close by the end of December. The station was supposedly jointly financed
by the Maltese and Libyan governments, but according to Maltese government sources the
Libyans have not made any payments since 1998. Despite that, the station moved into new
purpose-built accommodation earlier this year. It also launched its fourth Web site in a
relatively short space of time. The contract to run the Web site was awarded to a Maltese
Internet company that employs the son of VOM station manager Richard Muscat.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 17
DECEMBER 2003
Government officials say the station’s books have been audited, and nothing untoward has
been found. ( (According to the Maltese government, Libya has now informed it that it no
longer wishes to finance the station, so the government decided to close it down. The
opposition believe that such a decision should not have been taken unliaterally by the
government without a debate in parliament. The Labour Party’s spokesperson for foreign
affairs and IT, Leo Brincat, has called for an independent enquiry into circumstances
surrounding the station, which has cost the taxpayer 1.5 million Maltese pounds over the
past three years.(RN News Media)
RUSSIA:
The official B03 schedule for Russian International Radio shows the following SW transmissions: 1500-1600 on 9555, 2000-2200 on 5965/5975, 2100-2200 on 5990kHz, all to ME via
DTK J¸lich with 100kW. Email: [email protected] . (Info received from the station by Alexey OsipovRUS). Via CUMBRE. ( (SLOVAKIA: SHORT WAVE: (Radio Slovakia International, transmitter site
Rimavsk· Sobota (3 transmitters): power has been reduced to 200 kW (ex 250). (HCDX)
SPAIN:
REE broadcasts to Spanish soldiers in Iraq
On Sunday, Radio Exterior de Espana (REE) launched a weekly programme linking Spanish
soldiers on active service in Iraq with their families at home. The programme AquÌ Espana
(This is Spain) is a joint production between REE and the domestic network Radio 5 Todo
Noticias, and is on the air between 1405 and 1500 UTC. As well as forging a link between the
military base at Diwaniya and families at home, the programme will also carry the latest
sports and entertainment news. There will also be background information about Iraq. The
broadcast is beamed to the Middle East on shortwave 21610 kHz and relayed over an FM
transmitter recently installed at Diwaniya. According to the REE Web site it is also carried on
frequencies beamed to Europe, Africa and the Americas. (RN News Media)
COSTA RICA:
Radio for Peace International Under Siege
The only shortwave radio station dedicated to peace and social justice in the Western
Hemisphere is under siege by the UN mandated University. In July, the University served an
eviction notice to the radio station staff.
Yesterday the United Nation’s University for Peace began to use aggressive means to force
the shut down of the station. At noon they cut off the water supply to the remaining 8 staff
and volunteers holed up in the building. Four hours later the University cut the telephone
lines. Security guards have turned away reporters and cameramen who have come out to
try to enter the campus.
Since the University is owned by the United Nations, they are claiming immunity from all
laws and law enforcement; the station has little power against this major act of censorship.
(HCDX)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 18
DECEMBER 2003
LATIN CORNER:
COLOMBIA
La Voz del Llano, reactivated on 6113 kHz
6113.02 kHz La Voz del Llano, Villavicencio (Colombia) - 1040 UTC. Reactivated! First time for
many years I have noted LV del Llano on the listed frequency of 6115 kHz. Stable signal with
good sound quality but very weak. Colombian “llanero” music and clear IDs. 1100 UTC the
colombian anthem followed by some advertisments and religious talk. “LV del Llano
orgullosamente colombiana”.( Bjorn Malm, Quito, via HCDX)
GUATEMALA.
Radio Verdad 4052.5.
Here is interesting extract from a letter I received recently from Dr. Edgar Amilcar Madrid
along with QSL card etc.
“We went on air on February 25th. year 2000, and we have celebrated our second anniversary
already. You may not believe me, but we have been transmitting with only 280 watts power,
due to some governmental limitations and some damage. Our transmitter is a new 1KW
Solid State Omnitronix, produced in Italy. Several Guatemalan radio technicians have thought
that we are transmitting with 10KW. Power, because it comes out so strong. I have made
several trips in our country, and the signal is very strong. But we still need to make some
adjustments. Our antenna is a bipolar 12 meter high, in order not to miss reaching the
closest city, Chiquimula, which we are doing nicely. Our station is a non-profit educational
and evangelical effort. We start out transmissions at 5.00 o’clock in the morning and go off
the air by 11.00pm. I’m including a paper that illustrates the countries which have reported
Radio Truth, our fourth QSL card, our banner and our new 2003 calender.
Our frequency range is 4.0475 - 4.0575, with an average of 4.0525Mhz. SW1 75 meter
band, transmitting from “Horeb Mount” and”“Glory’s Hill” in Chiquimula, Guatemala. We
still don’t have any call letters, but we think they are going to be: TGAV, which means:
TG=Transmissions of Guatemala. A=Identification of the Eastern area of Guatemala. V=
Our particular identification as “Radio Verdad” (Radio Truth) We have moved our studios to
Chiquimula City and are transmitting up to 11.00pm Guatemala time.
Lightning destroyed more than one half of our main SW transmitter, hence our 280 Watts
power. This happened on June 6th. year 2003 despite having three lightning rods in the
area and some other protection and we had much difficulty locating replacement transistors
to replace those burned out but we eventually did receive them and are now back on 1kw
power.
Now we are on the way to obtain an AM MW frequency. (Ian Cattermole)
Radio Verdad can sometimes be quite well heard here in NZ around 1100UTC. (ED)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 19
DECEMBER 2003
FEATURED FREQUENCY:
This month it is 9655KHZ. How many of these are you able to hear and identify?
Time.
0000-0155
0345-0425
0500-0600
0630-0700
0930-1030
1200-1250
1300-1330
1400-1800
1800-2100
1900-1930
2000-2359
2100-2130
2100-2130
2130-2200
2200-2230
2300-2359
Station. Country. Days. Language. Power. Site
Deutsche Welle Rwanda 1234567 GERMAN 250 Kigali
Radio Televisione Italiana Italy 1234567 Unknown 100 Roma
Greece Radio International Greece 1234567 Unknown 250 Kavalla
Radio Romania International Romania 1234567 GERMAN 250 Tiganesti
Radio France Internationale Japan 1234567 Mandarin 300 Tokyo Yamata
Deutsche Welle Sri Lanka 1234567 INDONESIAN 250 Trincomalee (Perkara)
Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting Iran (Islamic Rep. of) 1234567 JAPAN* 500 Sirjan
Deutsche Welle Sri Lanka 1234567 GERMAN 250 Trincomalee (Perkara)
Radiodifusao Portuguesa, SA Portugal 17 PORTUGUESE 100 Lisbon-Sao Gabriel
China Radio International China 1234567 Unknown 500 Kunming
China Radio International China 1234567 Unknown 100 Lingshi
Radio Budapest Hungary 1234567 French 250 Jaszbereny
Radio Romania International Romania 1234567 SPANISH 250 Galbeni
Radio Romania International Romania 1234567 PORTUGUESE 250 Galbeni
VOA - Voice of America Morocco 1234567 Unknown 250 Morocco
Turkish Radio-TV Corp Turkey 1234567 English 500 Emirler
IRELAND
Today December 7, 2003 on 15280 at 1025 I heard RTE Ireland announcement several
times that they are rethinking about their SW broadcasts now that they are on internet and
satellite. They are asking for feedback at [email protected] 73 Jose Jacob via HCDX.
I received the following reply (by auto reply?) from RTE Ireland for my comments on their
rethinking of SW broadcasts.
"Thank you for responding to RTE's SW survey. This survey will continue till the 12th of DEC.
2003. All correspondence is viewed on a daily basis and the messages will inform our future
SW strategy.
Lennie Kaye
Technical Operations Manager,
Radio RTE Ireland "
Jose Jacob via HCDX.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 20
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Laurie Boyer , Invercargill
Thank you all for your support for the last year and hope you all have plenty of loggings
and veries next year.
First up is Ray Crawford Forestdale Queensland
Queensland. Ray has veries in from AFRTS Puerto
Rico 7507, Florida 5446.5, Radio Seagull via Latvia 9290, HCJB Darwin 11750, XERTA 4810 All
emailsand Prague 15255, Austria 13730, DW Antigua 11985. Thanks Ray.
Paul Ormandy Oamaru With Radio Macedonia 4890. Nice one Paul
John Durham Comes up with Solid Rock Radio via WRMI 7385, ARDS Humpty Doo
5049, IRRS 5775, Radio EZRA via Sitkunai 7560.
Ian Cattermole Blenheim With another good list KTWR 9740, Voice of Mediterranean
9605,CNR2 9810, Voz Christiana 13635,15475, RNZI Shepparton 9580, RAI 7235, Pan American
13605, 12015, Radio Taiwan via DTK 6120, Radio Veritas 9615, 15360, 15570, Voice of Croatia
7285, Bible Voice 11650, 7295, 9860, WSHB 11780, 11650, Voice of Vietnam 5955, RVI 5965,
Overcomer 7560, Sagalee Bibisummaa 9820, AWR 9840, IBRA 9520. Great Ian
Ron Killick Christchurch Radio Japan 9660, DWR Sines 9660, Wertachtal 17810, HCJB
Kununarra 15555, 11750, 11765, AWR KSDA 15235, 11980, Moosbrunn 9820, Al Dhabayya
12015, Rimavska Sobota 7130, Paochung [Taiwan] 15445, Thanks Ron
Stu Forsyth Darfield Has DW wertachtal 11785.
Rich D'Angelo Wyomissing PA USA With LRA 36 Antarctica 15476,Radio Caiari Brazil
4785, Radio Educacao Rural de Tefe Brazil 4925, Radio Misiones Internacionales Honduras
3340, Radio Cochiquas 11430, Voice of Captain Ron 6925.
Laurie Boyer Invercargill Radio New Zealand 15265, 15340, 11980, Radio Taiwan 3955,
Radio Bulgaria 7500.
Best of Month Under 9MHz
Best of Month Over 9MHz
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
Radio Macedonia 4890 Paul Ormandy
Sagalee Bibisumma 9820 Ian Cattermole
PAGE 21
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Evan Murray, Auckland
2480
5450
5643
8802
0740
0821
1840
0920
8828
8861
8861
8861
8867
0900
0820
0831
0749
0641
8867
0113
8867
8942
9032
2203
0928
1912
9032
1913
9032
1923
9032
9032
9032
9032
9032
9032
13533
21925
21985
21985
21985
21985
21985
1924
1925
1920
1929
1933
1942
0445
0314
0131
0136
0159
0516
0520
Fishing boats on Chatham rise talking of lack of takeable fish. BT
RAF Volmet for Keflavik, Nairobi. EM
QF 118/Nadi Contact centre on 121.8. EM
Australian fishermen discussing entering the Fairway then entering the
harbour before tide too low. BT
Auckland Volmet. BT
JKM 360/ ? Standby for SC check. EM
Kirensk Volmet. EM
Buenas dias Go ahead FL 400 SC ERMQ. EM
Brisbane/Icelandair 1407 SC JRCG Request relay to Company
KEFOKFI departed Sydney 0611 estimate Auckland 0850. MJ
PAN PAN PAN This is King Air 81 (RNZAF) descending 230 en route
Chathams- Ohakea. MJ
Brisbane/NZ 123 on 88. EM
Manila/Cathay 781 FL 390. EM
Skier 01 advises ÑDepartureâ Mac Centre replies report when
established in block 200/260 . JC
Skier 01 gives off deck to Mac Centre departed Ice Runway
1910 est South Pole 2155 est Pole One 1932. JC
Twin Otter SJB advised by Mac Centre of C130 departing McMurdo and
taking a look at runway at Terra Nova Bay Before heading for Christchurch. JC
Mac Centre thanks Twin Otter KBH for transmission. JC
Mac Centre asks Twin Otter KJB (?) if transponder on. JC
Skier 01 advises Ñin the block 200/260â. JC
Twin Otter KGB (very weak) calls Mac Centre. JC
Skier 01 gives revised PoleOne estimate as 1942. JC
Skier 01 checks Pole One 1942 est Pole Two 2036. JC
DSB mode. Voice messages Alpha Xray Delta. BT
San Francisco/Cathay 0826 FL 330 SC BECF. EM
? 116/San Franscisco FL 430 At 131 E Correct ?. EM
San Francisco/Coast Guard 1712 DELO at 0134 180/20 Next DILIS. EM
Air Nauru 321/San Francisco FL 340. EM
Japanese Air Force ? /San Francisco. EM 118.2 Squawk 2100. EM
NZ 319/San Francisco. EM
Contributors
JC
MJ
BT
EM
John Charlton, Greymouth Kenwood 5000 and 30m wire
Mike Jackson, Fielding - Lowe 235 ands 5.6/8.8 dipole
Bob Talbot, Waitara FRG 8800 and 44m end feed long wire attached to 7m whip
Evan Murray, Auckland Kenwood 5000 and T2FD
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 22
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Adam Claydon, Te Kuiti
Hello to everyone from an unemployed radio announcer. (But at least I get to sleep in now!)
From Gordon Matheson of Paeroa
I am a DJ (part-time) though this is not my main job. I do a weekly 2 hour stint on Sunday
nights 8 - 10 pm on our local 92.2 Nga Iwi FM. I vary from oldies to rock - heavy metal to rock
‘n roll - all sorts. Nga Iwi has two transmitters - 92.2 is located near Maramarua on Rataroa
peak visible from State Highway 2, and 99.5 on top of the studio building in Paeroa.
I was most interested in the article on LP FM stations. While we don’t yet have one in Paeroa,
there are two in nearby Te Aroha;
1.
88.2
2.
106.9
Destination Te Aroha - started broadcasting through the town’s main
street sound system before getting 88.2.
Unforgettable Music - similar format as the former 99.8 Today FM
plays 1940s - 1960s oldies.
I haven’t yet visited these stations. Recently while travelling through Matamata I saw a sign
between State Highway 27 and the railway line proclaiming “107FM”, so I tuned the car stereo in and yes, another LP FMer playing all music but no ID heard.
I see no FM logs or QSLs in the last three months - does this mean most FMers simply don’t
recognise DX reports. I have only about 25 - from 1984-1996, whereas my MW QSL total is
600+ (1974-1989). I have just gotten back into the DX hobby after a lay off. Just about need
to retire to do all my hobbies, but that is almost 20 years off.
From Brian Palamountain of Nelson
Loggings for November:
90FM Rahotu 90.8
Energy FM Rahotu 92.4
Concert FM 102.5
Niu-FM 103.4 Waikato (came in loud and clear 0700-0730 NZT broadcasting an IslandsMaori breakfast programme, then faded away)
2CFM Gosford NSW 101.3
ABC Classic FM Newcastle 106.1
Receiver - Sony ICF2001 with telescopic aerial.
Re the Concert Fm 102.5 that Brian had in his logs. I have no listing to support this and am
pretty confident my sources are up to date. Maybe it was an Aussie?
(Bryan Clark)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 23
DECEMBER 2003
National Radio’s move to FM
Bryan Clark, Auckland reports hearing National Radio’s new 101.0 FM outlet from Mount Te
Aroha whilst driving home from work on 3 December. A good signal in elevated parts of
Auckland’s Eastern Bays.
Here’s a list of all the current National Radio FM frequencies (from www.rnz.co.nz)
Auckland 101.4, Hamilton 101.0, Tauranga 101.0, Waihi 96.4, Rotorua 101.5, Te Kuiti 94.0, Taupo
101.5 and 104.7, Palmerston North 101.0, Wellington 101.3, Takaka 98.2, Greymouth 95.5,
Lake Tekapo 89.0, Twizel 92.6, Omarama 97.3, Otematata 106.7, Wanaka 91.4, Milford Sound
92.0, Te Anau 92.0, Chatham Islands 89.7
Prime Boosts Nelson Coverage
Since early September Prime Television has had a new UHF transmitter operating from Kaka
Hill near the Grampians. Auckland-based Production Supervisor for Prime, Paul Hogan says
this complements the Mount Campbell transmitter installed 4 months earlier. (Brian
Palamountain)
Hamilton Student Radio Revived
About 12.30pm on Monday, Dan Howard threw the switch and Hamilton’s newest radio
station went to air. Contact 106FM is a throwback to the days of student radio in Hamilton –
- it even has the same name –- but this time it is not controlled by the Waikato Student Union
(WSU). The original Contact FM was sold by the WSU in the early 1990s and it has since
become “new rock alternative” station the Generator. (Median Strip November 19)
Bidding Passes $6 Million For Auckland Frequencies
Bidding on each of the two new Auckland FM frequencies has now passed the $6 million
mark. With the bids now rising in larger multiples, CanWest holds the top bid on lot 3EA
(100.6FM) with a bid of $6,332,301. The Radio Network currently holds the top bid on lot 3EB
(105.4FM) at $6,572,895. Both the New Zealand Racing Board and newcomers the Sahil
Family Trust have also been active bidders on those lots in preceding rounds. Bidding many
of the other AM and FM lots around the country has stalled, while others remain very active.
A Waiheke Island frequency (90.6FM) is the only other lot to reach six figures so far, with a
high bid by Voice TV Inc $200,001. A total of $14,308,847 has so far been put up n the 66 AM,
FM and television frequencies. Bidding continues until completion of one clear round in which
no new valid bids are received (on any lot), and no previous bids are withdrawn. (Median
Strip December 3)
Pacific FM news
Here’s an item of Pacific FM news from Radio Netherlands. There was a time when I would
have said it was a possible DX chance from NZ but no more! Samoa’s leading commercial
broadcaster, Radio Polynesia, has opened an additional radio station. The company’s general manager, Corey Keil, which runs three stations in English and Samoan, says the new
station is targeted to listeners in the 30 to 50 year bracket. “Some of them do not like all the
rap music on the top 40 station - Magic -so some of our listeners in the middle aged bracket
are now tuning across to our brand new station - K Rock 96.1” (Source: Radio New Zealand
International via Andy Sennitt, Radio Netherlands Media Network 11/03; via Bryan Clark)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 24
DECEMBER 2003
New Zealand radio surveys
Yes, it’s that time of the year when stations give away thousands of dollars so they can be
number one with the radio listening public. It’s been a good survey for Classic Hits (although
not in Te Kuiti!). Here are the top 3 stations in each market. For full results go to:
www.medianstrip.com/survey.htm
Northland:
Auckland:
Waikato:
Tauranga:
Rotorua:
Taranaki:
Hawkes Bay:
Manawatu:
Wellington:
Nelson:
Christchurch:
Dunedin:
Southland:
KCC FM 24.9%, The Edge 13.4%, Classic Hits Northland 13.3%
Newstalk ZB 13.1%, Classic Hits 97FM 10.2%, Mai FM 10.1%
Classic Hits ZHFM 15.3%, The Edge 14.7%, The Rock 11.2%
Classic Hits 95BOP 17.9%, Newstalk ZB 11.4%, The Rock 10.5%
Classic Hits 97.5FM 16.5%, The Edge 13.8%, Lakes 96FM 10.0%
Classic Hits 90FM 18.4%, The Edge 15.7%, Newstalk ZB 15.3%
The Edge 17.1%, The Rock 11.5%, Newstalk ZB 11.4%
2XS 16.7%, The Rock 12.9%, Classic Hits 97.8FM 10.3%
The Breeze 18.0%, 91ZM 13.5%, Newstalk ZB 13.2%
The Rock 17.7%, Fifeshire FM 14.8%, Classic Hits 14.3%
Newstalk ZB 15.3%, The Edge 12.3%, Lite FM 10.8%
Radio Dunedin 15.3%, Classic Hits 89.4FM 11.8%, The Rock 11.2%
Classic Hits ZAFM 18.3%, The Edge 9.5%, Newstalk ZB 9.2%
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 25
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
[email protected]
Compiled by Tony King, Greytown
The DX season for North Americans seems to have taken some time coming and
there’ve been some good nights with X-banders bringing in some great signals. This month
on X band there is the possibility in the next few weeks of 1650 adding KBIV in El Paso, Texas.
It has tested and may be a Christmas QSL for us !
Firstly from the Mailbag:
RAY CRAWFORD
CRAWFORD, Forestdale ,Queensland reports “ Not much listening. Static levels been
high this week or so. Summer must be here, hi! A lone report out to Southern Star 657
Veries in from KWRU 940, WRDW 1630, WTEL 1480, WKAT 1360 and Southern Star 657.
Hope Santa brings all the DX you want and that the next year is a good one.
PAUL ORMANDY
ORMANDY, Oamaru rushes in with no logs... though some QSLs!
HJLI Radio Minuto 1520kHz 1kW, SIBS Honiara 1035 (Country 145).
STU FORSYTH
FORSYTH, Darfield has relogged KMIK 1580 and Radio 2 Brisbane 1602 and now awaits
some just rewards !
GORDON MATHESON
MATHESON, Paeroa writes: October’s logs are Magic 828 Palmerston North, Lakes
96FM 1548 Rotorua and Southern Star 909 Hawkes Bay
QSL in from National Radio 1YO Tokoroa 729.
The frequency of 729 provides an example of 2 AM signals on 1 frequency mixing by day National Radio Tokoroa and Radio Sport Whangarei.
Travelling north from Tokoroa, National Radio is excellent on my car stereo until around
Matamata, then good and steady to just north of Te Aroha, where the first signs of Radio
Sport appear. The 20km from Te Aroha to Paeroa
sees Radio Sport improve to approximately equal to that of National Radio, whose reducing
signal is equalised by Radio Sport. The 2 other Whangarei stations - Newstalk ZB 1026 and
National Radio 1YX 837 are also good.
Mostly sea-path reception from Whangarei to Paeroa accounts for this. The mixing signals
on 729 remain fairly constant travelling from Paeroa to Thames (30km) but once along the
Thames Coast Road, National Radio Tokoroa disappears entirely. Radio Sport Whangarei
becomes excellent, particularly north of Coromandel.
It would be interesting to hear from other MW DXers about their daytime reception
experiences on other shared frequencies.
SUTTON BURTENSHAW
BURTENSHAW, Hamilton
One lone report out to 1ZO 1413 (again)
QSLs in from 2YX 1116 and 1YR 1188 with a ppc from 1XCM 936.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 26
DECEMBER 2003
DOWN THE DIAL (NZDT P.M)
1620
1620
USA
USA
0844
0836
1630
USA
0803
1660
1660
1670
1670
1690
1690
1700
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
USA
0930
0854
0917
0917
0814
0911
0807
1700
1700
USA
USA
0850
0858
1700
USA
0850
WDHP Frederikstad US VI. BBC WS - Aids in Africa.
Peak 0910 TK
WTAW College Station TX. Coast to Coast. CC
Radio ad TK
KKWY Wyoming, 61/11 with C & W. Co channel with NZ
Beacon. DN
KTIQ Sports ID :30 TK
KXOL Brigham City. 60’s pop. “Sugar Shack” ID :55 TK
KHPY Religious comentario. EE ID on hour. TK
KNRO Sports talk under KHPY TK
UNID. Heard ‘Jackson Five’ may be WRLL DN
KDDZ Arvada CO Disney. Juvenile ads TK
KBGG, Des Moines IA 16/11. ID “AM 1700” Continuous
news with female presenter ( CNN) DN
KTBK Sherman TX Sports Talk. Local ads 0855 TK
WEUV Huntsville AL B2B gospel “My Sweet
Lord”, Everybody Praise the Lord” “Put a little Love in your Heart”
TK.
KQXX Brownsville TX. Oldies “Sweet Caroline” “Leader
of the Pack. ‘Super 60’s weekend.” TK
DX NEWS
Australia
873 2GB Sydney part of new joint venture between Southern Cross Broadcasting
and Macquarie Radio Network which sees news, advertising sales and ‘behind the
mike’ operations combined with 2UE 954 and 2CH 1170. The 2UE operation moves
to the physical 2GB location at Pyrmont (The end result will be similar to the major
commercial network operations in NZ which see different radio brands/programs
originating from one multi-studio location. The ABA is investigating how this affects
issues of control of the individual licences, which are limited to common control of two
licences in one market.)
1035 2EA Wollongong to move here ex 1485 with power increase to cover growing
Illawarra region. This channel has previously been clear of Australian stations to protect
2ZB Wellington who use 20kW here.
1611 6GS Wagin transmitter off-air since June. Operator Cybervale Pty loses
commercial licence over issues of filing accounts and records. However, because this
is outside standard BCB, Cybervale can still operate a narrowcast service here (as it
does on 1422 also in Wagin). Source: ABA (David Ricquish)
According to reports on aus.radio.broadcast 1116 3AK Melbourne goes to a totally
Sports format on January 1 2004 (Onley)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 27
DECEMBER 2003
Changes to Radio Services in the Illawarra Region
The Australian Broadcasting Authority has decided to allow the existing SBS radio service,
2EA,to move to an alternative frequency (1035 kHz) in order to be able to transmit at a higher
power. The current 2EA frequency (1485 kHz) will continue to be reserved for a national radio
service for the foreseeable future.
Western Australia radio station loses licence:
The Australian Broadcasting Authority has stripped a radio station in Wagin, in southern
Western Australia, of its commercial radio licence. The authority assessed the business records
of Cybervale Proprietary Limited and found it was an unsuitable licensee. It has refused to
renew the licence for Radio 6GS, which expired on Tuesday [25 November]. The AM station
[1611 kHz] has been off the air for six months, due to lightning damage to the transmitter.
Cybervale general manager Sherryl Chilcott says there will be little change for listeners. She
believes the decision not to renew the licence is part of a process of phasing out what are
known as S40 licences. “It enables people to play news at the top of the hour, play fully
commercial music and also commercial breaks with no restrictions,” she said. “They decided they were not going to issue any more of these licences and I believe that we will be
the first cab off the rank to have our licence taken away from us.”
Source: ABC News Online via Andy Sennitt, Media Network weblog) via BDC
(Source:
NEW ZEALAND
1377 2XX at present running a tape that they are closing their 1377 AM frequency at the end
of the week and to retune to 90.2 FM. (Bill Waller Opunake)
Radio Waitomo 1170 is still on air
air, relaying Classic Hits ZHFM from Hamilton.
Tenders closed last Friday 5th December. (Adam Claydon)
HAWAII
KIPA 620 Hilo, HI was oldies is now silent. (Richard Wood HI)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 28
DECEMBER 2003
U.S. X-BAND AT A GLANCE
DECEMBER 2003
COMPILED BY TONY KING, GREYTOWN, NEW ZEALAND
1610
1620
1630
1640
1650
1660
1670
1680
1690
1700
CJWI
WBUB
WDND
KOZN
WTAW
KBLI
KYIZ
KSMH
KFHX
WDHP
KCJJ
KKWY
KNAX
WRDW
WKSH
KDZR
KDIA
WTNI
Montreal QUE
Atmore AL
South Bend IN
Bellevue NE
College Station TX
Blackfoot ID
Renton WA
West Sacramento, CA
Fountain Hills AZ
Frederikstad, US Virgins
Iowa City IA
Fox Farm WY
Ft Worth/Dallas TX
Augusta GA
Sussex WI
Lake Oswego OR
Vallejo CA
Biloxi MS
KMMZ
KBJA
WHKT
KBIV
KDNZ
KWHN
KBJD
KFOX
KTIQ
WWRU
WCNZ
WQSN
KRZX
KQWB
KXOL
KXTR
WGIT
WRNC
WTDY
KHPY
KNRO
WTTM
WLAA
WDSS
KAVT
KTFH
KRJO
KDDZ
KFSG
WRLL
Enid OK
Sandy UT
Portsmouth VA
El Paso TX
Cedar Falls IA
Fort Smith AR
Denver CO
Torrance CA
Merced CA
Elizabeth NJ
Marco Is FL
Kalamazoo MI
Waco TX
West Fargo ND
Brigham City UT
Kansas City KS
Canovanas PRico
Warner Robins GA
Madison WI
Moreno Valley, CA
Redding CA
Princeton NJ
Winter Garden FL
Ada MI
Fresno CA
Seattle WA
Monroe LA
Arvada CO
Roseville CA
Berwyn/Chicago IL
WSWK
WPTX
WJCC
WEUV
KTBK
KBGG
KQXX
Adel, GA
Lexington Park
Miami Springs FL
Huntsville AL
Sherman TX
Des Moines IA
Brownsville TX
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
FF Caribbean music.
Yet to be heard in US
ESPN Radio 1620
ESPN Sport .”The Zone”
'Newstalk 16-20 WTAW' Takes 'USA Radio News'
SS "Radio Fiesta"
Urban/R & B; hip hop
KSMH West Sacramento. Catholic.
Variety. Pre 70’s Mx.“KFHX Fountain Hills,Arizona.”
BBC WS to after 0900 ID at :59
Hot AC /Classic Rock
C&W AP nx “ K-W-Y 1630”
SS. Radio Vida/ Radio Dos Mil Dos. EE ID :58
'Newstalk 1630"
Disney
Disney
Talk/religious/life issues
“Talk Radio 1640 WTNI Biloxi”Takes Coast to Coast. ABC
nx.ID :05
'Unforgettable Favourites" P.O. Box 952 Enid OK 73702.
SS/Radio Unica EE ID on hour
“AM1650 WHKT Portsmouth, Radio Disney”
Testing. C & W heard (Patrick Martin OR)
Talk/ Sport "The Talk Station"//KCNZ
'Newstalk 1650 KWHN'
Talk. “KNUS-2”
Korean/ EE ID on hour
Sporting News Network ‘The Ticket”
PP & SS Radio Unica/R. Portugal.
‘Newsradio 1660' AP nx.
Sports/talk ESPN
"Newstalk KRZX" (off 1900 NZT)
Standards "Star 1660 is KQWB AM' CNN news
“Oldies Radio” (60’s rock)
'Classical 1660'
SS oldies "El Gigante"
Urban Gospel "1670 The Light"
Sports/Talk. "Talk Radio 1670”
Radio Catolica SS EE on the hour.
"Redding's ESPN Radio 1670 KNRO'
Ethnic – South Asian
SS Regional Mex.
Disney
Disney/SS
“The Bridge, AM 16-80 KTFH Seattle.” Ethnic.
Gospel. “Rejoice 1680”
Disney
SS rel. and Asian. EE ID on hr "KFSG Sacramento"
"Real Oldies 1690" Address: Real Oldies 1690, WRLL –
AM, 233 N Michigan Ave, Suite 2800, Chicago IL 60601.
Currently carrying 'Wild Adventure Radio"
“Newstalk 1690 WPTX” CNN headline News
SS/Rel/"Radio Luz”
Black Gospel.
Sporting News Radio “Sports Radio 1310 KTCK.”
‘AM 1700 KBGG". CNN
‘Oldies Radio 1700 AM’
PAGE 29
DECEMBER 2003
List of Australian X-Band
Stations
Updated 25 November 2003
Khz
CALL
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
1611
2NTC
2NTC
2RG
2**
3XX
6**
6GS
6AY
1620
1620
1620
1620
1RF
2KM
3GB
4**
1629
1629
2HRN
2NTC
1629
1629
1629
1629
1629
3**
3RF
4DB
4RF
5RF
1638
1638
2ME
3ME
Name
Location
State
Power
Armidale
Tamworth
Griffith
Sydney
Melbourne
Margaret River
Wagin
Albany
NSW
NSW
NSW
NSW
VIC
WA
WA
WA
400w
400w
400w
400w
400w
400w
400w
400w
C/W
O
C/W
O
Italian
O
Commercial
Music
O
C/W
O
Community O
Canberra
Sydney
GB & Hillside Radio Melbourne
Radio 2
Brisbane
ACT
NSW
VIC
QLD
400w
400w
400w
400w
Italian
O
Arabic
O
UK & CommunitO
Commercial O
Hospital Radio
Newcastle
Bathurst
NSW
NSW
100w
400w
Melbourne
Shepparton
Dalby
Brisbane
Adelaide
VIC
VIC
QLD
QLD
SA
400w
400w
400w
400w
400w
NSW
VIC
400w
400w
Arabic
Arabic
Sydney
NSW
400w
Greek
Emu Plains
NSW
400w
?
Sydney
NSW
400w
Greek
Brisbane
Sydney
QLD
NSW
100w
400w
Hindi
C&W
Radio Italia
Radio 2
Double X
Radio Italia
Radio 2
Radio Italia
Radio Italia
Radio Italia
Radio Lebanon
Radio Lebanon
1647
CLEAR FREQUENCY
1656
CLEAR FREQUENCY
1665
2MM
1674
2**
1683
2**
1692
1701
1701
Greek Radio
Radio Club AM
Sydney
Hoppers Crossing
Format
Hospital
C/W
S
O
Commercial O
Italian
O
O
Italian
O
Italian
O
O
O
CLEAR FREQUENCY
4**
2NTC
Radio 1701
Future plans are to include station addresses.
Please send any updates or corrections to David Onley at [email protected]
Source. ARDXC:
http://www.ardxc.fl.net.au/Xband.html
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 30
DECEMBER 2003
From NZRDXL member Jerry Berg, 38 Eastern Avenue, Lexington, MA 02421, USA
NEW HISTORY MATERIAL AT http://www.ontheshortwaves.com
Under "Articles, Research, etc.," "Full-Text Articles": What would be your vote for the
"Ten Best Foreign Short Wave Stations"? Here are the picks of editor J. B. L. Hinds in his first
article for the shortwave section of Short Wave Radio magazine, July 1934.
Under "Articles, Research, etc.," "Pot Pourri," Wolfgang Bueschel in Germany sends
along two pictures of station lists taken by Bernhard Weiskopf, Mannheim, Germany at an
exhibition of pre-World war II radio sets held by Prof. Söll in Neu-Isenburg, near Frankfurt am
Main. These LW and MW listings are from around the 1941-1944 era. Note that the Podebrad
site in occupied Czechoslavakia is listed, along with various stations that are still on the air,
e.g. Warsaw 224 (now 225), Luxembourg 232 (now 234), Stuttgart Muehlacker 574 (now
576), Vienna Bisamberg 592 (now ITU registered 585), Prague 638, Leipzig Wiederau 785
(now 783), and Warsaw 1384 (now Kaliningrad Bolshakovo [soon Sitkunai, Lithuania] 1386).
Under "CPRV," "QSL Gallery," some oldtime SWBC QSLs from Europe, specifically:
Armed Forces Radio Service, Austria, 1950; Radio Sofia, Bulgaria; Finnish Broadcasting Station,
Lahti, Finland, 1938; the German "Zeesen" station, 1934; the Irish shortwave broadcasting
station, Dublin, 1939; PCJ, Radio Nederland; the shortwave station in Oslo, Norway, 1950;
Radio Clube Portugues, Lisbon, 1946; VOA, USCGC "Courier" at Rhodes; Radio Roumania,
1952; EAQ, Radiodifusion Ibero-Americana, 1934; and Radio Nations, Geneva, Switzerland,
1937. These are from the collections of August Balbi, Ed Bellington, Harold Bowers and Paul
Kary.
Under "SW History on the Net," some new links in the following five categories:
BROADCASTING ROOTS. IEEE History Center <http://www.ieee.org/organizations/
history_center/milestones_list.html> The History Center of the Institute of Electrical and
Electronics Engineers at Rutgers University has a Milestones Program which thus far has
identified 50 milestones honoring significant achievements in the history of electrical and
electronics engineering. Although these cover a wide variety of technological events, of
special interest to DXers will be those dealing with the Alexanderson alternator, code breaking
at Bletchley Park, the directive shortwave antenna, shortwave transmissions from Byrd's 1934
Antarctic expedition, reception of Transatlantic radio signals, radio station KDKA, and others.
STATIONS. (1) Canadian Radio History <http://www.odxa.on.ca/archives/
timelinehome.html> This part of the Ontario DX Association website presents three interesting
aids to understanding Canadian radio history: a timeline for general Canadian broadcasting
and a timeline for Canadian shortwave broadcasting (the only radio timelines I have seen
going back to 1642), and a valuable list of books dealing with Canadian radio history. (2)
Radio and TV Transmitters in France <http://perso.wanadoo.fr/tvignaud/index.html>
Althgough this site is in French, English speakers may enjoy stumbling around it for the pictures
alone. Look especially under "Allouis (F. Inter)" and "RFI-Issoudun/Allouis."
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
VERIFICATIONS. John Swatko's Radio Scrapbook, 1934 <http://www.radiold.com/
ephemera/radio_letters/sc_swatko.htm> This website shows the scrapbook of John Swatko,
who appears to have been a BCB DXer from Homestead, Pennsylvania and a member of
the Newark News Radio Club in 1934. Inside the scrapbook are a number of articles,
membership cards and DX stickers that relate to Mr. Swatko's DX hobby. You can click on the
pictures to see larger images of a few of the pages. Most important, the scrapbook contains
some 116 QSL cards and letters, some with EKKO stamps and postmarks, which Mr. Swatko
collected from the early 1930s, and all have been scanned in good quality and are nicely
viewable on the site. The site's author notes: "When I was looking through the letters I
noticed that one from 1932 is from my hometown of Manitowoc, Wisconsin. I also noticed
that the station manager and owner had a surname that is shared by some of my relatives.
After contacting some of my relatives, I was surprised to find out that he was a distant relative
of mine."
STATIONS AND VOICES OF WAR. Black Boomerang <http://www.seftondelmer.co.uk/
> Black Boomerang is a highly regarded book by Sefton Delmer which tells the story of the
World War II psychological warfare effort that Delmer headed in Britain, in particular its
clandestine broadcasting efforts which included stations like Gustav Siegfried Eins,
Soldatensender Calais and Atlantiksender. The book was published in 1962. Now it is
available in part on line, thanks to the efforts of Sefton Delmer's son, Felix Sefton Delmer. At
this URL you will find the first part of the book. The second part is expected to be posted soon.
In some respects the on-line version improves upon the original in that it includes photographs
(none in the book) and references to an interesting on-line database of wartime black
propaganda leaflets <http://www.psywar.org/> Thanks to Felix Delmer for informing
www.ontheshortwaves.com of this important effort.
POST-WAR SHORTWAVE. Radio jamming in Estonia <http://www.okupatsioon.ee/
english/mailbox/radio/radio.html> This interesting website was composed by I. Hallas, who
worked in an Estonian jamming station in 1955. The article details the jamming process,
including frequencies, antennas, personnel, organization, and how the noise was made.
One of the most interesting parts is the photos, made in 1956 and 1957. "It was strictly forbidden
to talk to any acquaintance or relative about the work. Needless to say, photographing the
objekt [the station] was just as strictly forbidden. Getting caught could have brought with it a
25 year prison sentence. Nevertheless, we took pictures, talked about our work, and
sometimes, at night, even brought in friends to show them the jammers. No one got caught."
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
Announcing the 2003-04, 9th Edition of "The IRCA Mexican Log"
The 9th Edition of the IRCA Mexican Log lists all AM stations in Mexico by frequency, including call letters, state, city, day/night power, slogans, schedule in UTC/GMT, formats, networks and notes. The call letter index gives call, frequency, city and state. The city index
(listed by state, then city) includes frequency, call and day/night power. The log has been
completely updated from the 2002 edition and carefully cross-checked by several IRCA
members. This is an indispensable reference for anyone who hears Mexican radio stations.
Size is 8 1/2" x 11" and three hole punched for easy binding.
Prices: (In US Dollars)
IRCA/NRC members - $9.50 (US/Canada/Mexico/sea mail),
$10.50 (rest of the Americas airmail),
$11.00 (Europe/Asia airmail),
$11.50 (Australia/New Zealand airmail).
Non-members: add $2.50 to the above prices.
To order the IRCA Mexican Log from the IRCA Bookstore, send the correct amount (in US
funds payable to Phil Bytheway) to:
IRCA BOOKSTORE, 9705 MARY NW, SEATTLE WA 98117-2334
THE INTERNATIONAL RADIO CLUB OF AMERICA
P.O. Box 60241, Lafayette LA 70596
http://www.ircaonline.org
The IRCA is a non-profit organization devoted to the hobby of hearing distant stations on the
Broadcast Band (510-1720 kHz). DX Monitor, the official publication of the IRCA, is published
in "soft" form 35 times a year (weekly from November through March, twice monthly from
April to November) and in printed form 30 times a year (weekly November through March,
monthly April to November). DX Monitor contains members' loggings, articles on radio
stations, receiver reviews, technical articles, DX tips, and other material of interest to Broadcast Band DX hobbyists. IRCA is a member of ANARC, the Association of North American
Radio Clubs.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 33
DECEMBER 2003
Some more i mages of
Short-wave Radio Station
Juelich.
(via Ian Cattermole)
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 34
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Bryan Clark, Auckland
WELCOME TO NEW OR REJOINING MEMBERS BOB TALBOT
TALBOT, 10 Ranfurly Street, Waitara,
Taranaki, PETER HENDERSON
HENDERSON, 3 Totara Street, Masterton and GREG COONEY
COONEY, P.O. Box 40495,
Upper Hutt. Welcome gentlemen – please write into one of our columns and let us know
what you are hearing on the radio. Peter rejoins after an absence of 6 years whilst Greg
writes that he was previously a member in the late 70’s when he lived in Christchurch. Bob
joins up courtesy of the DX League’s website www.radiodx.com Keep your ears tuned
gentlemen, and let us know what you hear!
QUARTZ HILL BARBECUE Our friends in the Quartz Hill User Group are having their
annual Open Day and Barbecue Lunch on Sunday 18 January. Gates open at 11.00am and
visitors should bring their own food and drink etc. Here’s your chance to see how the QHUG
have transformed the former Radio New Zealand Receiving Station into a world class DX
site. Contact DX League member RALPH SUTTON for more information (telephone 04-4730847 or email [email protected]) or check www.zl6qh.com .(See next page for antenna
layout for Quartz Hill)
MORE THREATS TO INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTING The big story last month was the
Dutch Government’s declaration that it would slash 60 million Euros from the annual budget
for public broadcasting. The impact on Radio Netherlands is still being assessed but, with a
10% budget cut already panned for 2004, there is the prospect of up to 4 million Euros being
slashed from the 2005 budget. Meanwhile, over at Swiss Radio International
International/Swiss Info, 35
positions out of a total of 147 fulltime jobs will be lost when government subsidies are cut
from the current 18 million Swiss Francs to just 5 million in 2005. Radio Telefis Eireann in
Dublin is currently reviewing its limited shortwave relays, and down at the Voice of the
Mediterranean in Malta, shortwave broadcasts will cease by the end of this month following
withdrawal of funding support from Libya. If you enjoy broadcasts from any of these
organisations please let them know – listener support could be a critical factor in their
continued presence on shortwave!
OUR CONGRATULATIONS to DX League member GUNTER JACOB who won the top
prize in Adventist World Radio’s 2003 DX Contest to find unique QSLs. Other members
featuring on the prize list were Pacific region winner RON KILLICK and Merit Award winner
JACK FOX
FOX. BRIAN WEBB and PETER GRENFELL received honourable mentions. Let’s see if we
can keep up the fine record of local hobbyists and League members next year, when the
contest will involve preparing a script on any suitable topic to be aired on the AWR Wavescan
DX programme, plus submitting details of 5 QSL cards that depict a specific theme. (See
below for a partial schedule for Wavescan).
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 35
DECEMBER 2003
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
JAPAN SHORT WAVE CLUB is producing regular DX-related broadcasts that are aired as follows:
Adventist World Radio –a short segment entitled Far Eastern DX Report is
carried on the “Wavescan” DX programme on the first Sunday edition each
month. The AWR frequency schedule (times in UTC) includes:
To Africa from Moosbrunn, Austria: 0830-0900 on 17820kHz; 0900-0930 1
7670kHz; 2100-2200 9660kHz.
To Africa from Meyerton, South Africa: 0500-0530 on 5960kHz & 6015kHz;
0530-0630 15345kHz; 0600-0630 15345kHz; 1800-1830 5960kHz and
7265kHz; 1800-1900 11985kHz; 2000-2100 15295kHz.
To Europe from Moosbrunn, Austria: 0830-0900 on 9660kHz.
To Middle East from KSDA Agat Guam: 1730-1800 on 11560kHz.
To Northeast Asia from KSDA Agat, Guam: 2130-2200 on 11980 & 12010kHz;
1000-1100 on 11900kHz.
To South East Asia from KSDA Agat, Guam: 1000-1030 on 11705kHz
HCJB World Radio “DX Partyline” – a short segment entitled Asian DX News airs on
the 4th Saturday of every month is allocated to our club during the every fourth
Saturday broadcast. The current DX Partyline schedule includes Saturday 0830-0900
UTC on 11750kHz from Kununurra, Western Australia and Saturday 1230-1300 on
15115 and 21455 (USB) kHz from Quito, Ecuador. The programme is also carried on
WINB and WWCR at other times.
When you listen to any of the JSWC segments, you can qualify for a QSL verification
card by sending a reception report plus an IRC or US$1 to Japan Short Wave Club, P.O.Box 29,
Sendai Central 980-8691 JAPAN, or Fax: +81-22-227-4194.
E-mail: [email protected]
Thanks to JSWC members NOBUYA KATO and TOSHINICHI OHTAKE (also a DX League
member) for their hobby initiative.
CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEAR GREETINGS to all members and fellow enthusiasts around
the world from the Administration Committee – David, Bryan, Evan, Phil and Barry. Let’s
hope Santa brings that wanted item of radio equipment, and 2004 brings better, clearer
receptions.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 37
DECEMBER 2003
branch.news
Compiled by Chief Editor, Wellington
AUCKLAND
The 30 November meeting had 8 present at the Clubrooms.
Malcolm Holmes invited us over to his place where we enjoyed a DVD movie called The
Dish
Dish, starring Sam Neil. Malcolm has a room outfitted as a home cinema. The NEC video
projector outputs a nice sharp and bright image.
THERE WILL BE NO MEETING IN DECEMBER
DECEMBER.
The January 2003 meeting will tentatively be at the Clubrooms, 3000 Great North Road, New
Lynn, just past Whau Creek, on Sunday, January 25th at 2 PM
PM.
Meetings are held on the last Sunday of the month except December.
NORTH OTAGO
Thanks to Peter Grenfell for organising a trip to Port Chalmers which took place on November 8th. 9 people took the trip, 7 members and 2 friends.
We left Oamaru at 10am and arrived at 11.30am and met Jack Fox as arranged.
We viewed operations in the control room, which everyone was most interested in. We
watched on a monitor the cargo ship Sydney Express come into the channel with explanations given to us on what was happening with the mapping out of the course of the channel
including wind speed, tide and speed of the ship at various points to navigate this tricky
channel. Three pilot boats were used to guide the Sydney Express at berthing. It is the longest cargo ship in Australasia to berth at Port Chalmers. There are also cameras surveying
the whole operations at the port.
October Meeting.
The October meeting took place at Ray Davey’s place at 7.30pm, with 7 members present.
Minutes and financial reports read, then correspondence etc.
A talk was given by Arthur De Maine on his thoughts of our trip to Port Chalmers.
Our December meeting is our yearly BBQ and Auction, so all you local members and anyone
else coming—Don’t forget those goodies.
SOUTHLAND BRANCH
Not much to report this month. Our Branch meeting was at Eric McIntosh's. Eric told us that
this was the 43rd meeting that held at his home (43 Years) Several Branch items were discussed and 2 good QSl's were tabled. Eddie MacAskill had CKMV 1570 10kw Manitoba
Canada, and Paul had R.Veritas via Sentech on 3230 k/hz Because of the busy Season
almost upon us, it was decided to leave the December meeting on a floating date so that we
would organise a date and venue to suit Members.The Members of the Southland Branch
would like to wish you all a Merry Christmas and Happy new year and may your radios
receive some good signals over the festive Season.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
WELLINGTON
Next get together of the Wellington area DXer’s is planned for Saturday 31st January 2004 at
2pm at Mark Nicholls residence at 4 Parera Grove, Heretaunga, Upper Hutt (ph 972 2606) or
contact President: Ted Hopgood email [email protected] T: 04 586 2486.
marketsquare - members free advertisements
WANTED.
UTC clock
Phil van de Paverd, Phone (09) 5346237, Email [email protected]
Wrong Signals
A mysterious transmission that baffled British intelligence boffins for days was caused by a
sheep rubbing up against an aerial pole.
Scientists at the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) in Cheltenham, Western
England, were baffled by strange High Frequency noises coming from a Scarborough signal
station in Yorkshire, Northern England.
An investigating team initially thought they were coming from spies or aliens.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 39
DECEMBER 2003
Radio Free Zimbabwe
Douglas Rogers
Monday November 24, 2003
The Guardian
Radio Free Zimbabwe
From a grimy suburb of London, exiled radio superstars are beaming out the only opposition
voice to Mugabe’s regime. Douglas Rogers meets the resistance
Douglas Rogers
Monday November 24, 2003
The Guardian
In the foothills of the Bvumba mountains near the Mozambican border in eastern
Zimbabwe, a group of villagers are gathered around a small portable radio waiting for the
daily broadcast of their favourite station. Their battery-powered short-wave transistor is tuned
to the 49m band and, as the evening sun dips below the masasa trees, a song from
Zimbabwe’s musical superstar Oliver Mtukudzi jangles to life.
The Shona track Wasakara - “You are old, you are spent, it is time to accept you are
old,” - is a thinly veiled reference to ageing president Robert Mugabe and is banned from
state radio, but the villagers know it well and some even sing along. As the chorus fades, the
deep, chocolate-smooth voice of Zimbabwe’s legendary music DJ John Matinde crackles
through the static. “This is SW Radio Africa, Zimbabwe’s independent voice.”
For the next three hours, these and hundreds of thousands of other Zimbabweans
will tune in to hear music, news and political interviews about their country that state-run
radio and television would never broadcast. And every evening, ordinary Zimbabweans will
speak to the station about the brutality and hardship of life in the country.
Tonight a woman tells Matinde how her activist husband has been beaten by the
feared youth militia; a truck driver on the South Africa-Zimbabwe border calls to say that girls
as young as 13 are prostituting themselves to buy food. The callers speak in a mixture of
Shona, Ndebele and English, and rarely use their real names for fear of retribution. Some
even whisper, afraid that they will be overheard by the police.
In a country where Mugabe’s regime ruthlessly controls all radio and television output,
and where the only independent newspaper has recently been shut down, SW Radio Africa
is the only independent voice. It broadcasts not from Zimbabwe but from the third floor of an
office block in a grimy suburb of north-west London. And it is run not by hardened political
hacks or opposition party activists, but by a group of DJs turned journalists, most of whom
made their names playing pop songs on Zimbabwean state radio in the 1980s and 1990s.
“I’d rather be playing Led Zeppelin,” says Gerry Jackson, 49, the station’s founder, a
veteran of 25 years’ broadcasting in Africa. “But as Zimbabweans we have other
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
responsibilities now.” A former DJ on ZBC’s music station Radio 3, the equivalent of the BBC’s
Radio 1, Jackson was fired for “insubordination” after airing live phone calls from people
being beaten by police during food riots in Harare in 1997.
In 2000 she fought and won a legal battle in the Supreme Court to set up Zimbabwe’s
first independent radio station, Capital FM, and began broadcasting with a transmitter set
up on a hotel roof in Harare. Within six days it was raided by soldiers wielding AK47s. They
smashed the studio equipment while Jackson’s two employees escaped in the hotel lift.
“Mugabe issued a presidential decree closing us down - and we only ever played music!”
Jackson decided then to broadcast from outside Zimbabwe and after a year raising
funds and putting a team together, moved to London, launching the station in December
2001. With an estimated 500,000 Zimbabweans living in the UK, back home people jokingly
refer to London as “Harare North.” The eight staff at the station reflect London’s democratic
“New Zimbabwe” mix: four black and three white Zimbabweans, plus a British website
designer.
It’s 4pm in the smart but cramped offices and the studio clock reads 6pm - Zimbabwe
time. Matinde and Mandy Mundawarara, the first-ever black voice on Zimbabwe-Rhodesia
radio back in 1979, are about to go on air. Without a budget to pay correspondents, and with
journalists continually being arrested or expelled, the station relies on ordinary Zimbabweans
to file stories.
The news desk has a team of “informal correspondents” with mobile phones, among
them a travelling salesman and a member of the Zimbabwean police, who file under false
names. “They are as good as trained reporters,” says Jackson. “Erudite and observant, never
irrational or rabid or calling for the overthrow of the government.” Stories can run for more
than 20 minutes and correspondents, who speak in whatever language they like, are never
interrupted or told to hurry up. “It’s open-forum, no-format, free-thinking radio,” says Jackson.
Today’s main story is about a demonstration in Harare by the National Constitutional
Assembly, a group calling for constitutional reform. The report is filed by a demonstrator who
describes police with batons beating and arresting protesters.The station has sat in on land
invasions, taking calls from white farmers hiding in their homes while their property is
ransacked. One recent interview was with a war veteran enraged that a government minister
was taking his farm. The interviewer, Violet Gonda, reminded the war veteran that months
before he himself had taken the land from a white farmer.
Some of the hardest-hitting interviews have been by Georgina Godwin. A few years
ago Godwin, 36, was Zimbabwe’s Sara Cox, a celebrity DJ with her own morning drive-time
show and newspaper gossip column. Today she finds herself interviewing presidents, foreign
ministers and dignitaries such as Archbishop Desmond Tutu. She recently broadcast a
threatening rant at her by Jocelyn Chiwenga, the firebrand wife of the head of the Zimbabwe
National Army. Godwin had ensured that a prize awarded by a Spanish-based organisation
to Chiwenga - who has personally conducted farm invasions and once told a white farmer,
“I haven’t tasted white blood in 22 years” - was withdrawn. “She called me in a rage,” says
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
Godwin proudly, “and I put the call on air.”
Such exposure of the regime has outraged Robert Mugabe. After trying to jam the
signal the government has now simply stopped Zanu members from speaking to the station.
It has also banned six of the station’s staff from returning to Zimbabwe. “They would be
welcomed back,” justice minister Patrick Chinamasa told parliament. “Welcomed back to
our prisons.”
The programming is not entirely unstructured. There are regular reports on the
economy and Aids, a weekly Letter from Zimbabwe by white farmer and author Cathy Buckle,
and a weekly Letter from America by Indiana University-based Zimbabwean academic and
journalist Professor Stanford Mukasa. The most harrowing programme is Callback. Presented
every night between 7.30pm and 8.30pm by Matinde and Mundawarara, this is an
opportunity for ordinary Zimbabweans to speak about life in the country. Since phoning
England is expensive, listeners are given a mobile number to call in Harare to leave their
contact details, and the station calls them back.
“We encourage them to speak openly and honestly but not to use their surnames,”
says Mundawarara. “They’re taking the risk, we’re not.” They speak to women who have
been raped by soldiers, and youth militia deserters who speak coldly and bluntly about
people they have killed or tortured. Increasingly, they are hearing stories about families
breaking up because partners spend days on end in food and petrol queues.
It is when these grim stories are interspersed with music, though, that Callback has its
real power. Matinde, Zimbabwe’s John Peel, will follow up a call about youth militia violence
with Bob Marley’s Get Up, Stand Up, or a call about a farm invasion with Thomas Mapfumo’s
2001 hit Marima Nzara: “You have caused hunger, you have chased away capable farmers,
do the farming yourself, you have a big mouth.”
For Matinde, there is an eerie sense of deja vu about the station. In the 1970s he was
a DJ on the “native” service of the Rhodesian Broadcasting Corporation. “The [Ian] Smith
regime put strict controls on what we could say and play but we would send subtle messages
to the guerrillas in the bush,” he recalls. He was the first DJ to play the Chimurenga (struggle)
music of Mapfumo and Mtukudzi before the white regime discovered the content and clamped
down. By the time the country attained independence in 1980, Matinde’s reputation was
such that he got to introduce Bob Marley to the crowd at the independence celebrations in
Harare. It was Marley’s last concert. By 1993, Matinde had risen to become the head of
Radio 3.
All of which, Matinde says, seems a long time ago. “It’s strange. We went from not
being able to play the likes of Thomas and Oliver in the 1970s, to being able to play them in
the 80s, to not being allowed to now.” Now, every Monday at 8.30pm, hepresents Melody
Makers, in which he interviews Zimbabwean artists and poets, playing their new songs that
never get aired on the ZBC. “Many musicians have had to flee, but others, like Raymond
Majongwe, are still in Zimbabwe, doing great protest music under terrible pressure.”
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
Just how many people the station reaches is hard to say. Batteries are too expensive
for many Zimbabweans and the short-wave signal is not brilliant. Short-wave radios are
also hard to come by. Ironically, Ian Smith’s regime stopped making them in the 1970s so that
blacks could not listen to outside broadcasts.
That said, Jackson gets reports all the time of villagers in Zimbabwe and exiles in
South Africa huddled around campfires listening to the station. There is talk too that its archives
- digital recordings of every interview they have done - could be used in future human rights
trials.
Perhaps what is most extraordinary is that, after two years of airing mostly grim stories,
the staff have managed to stay sane and keep a sense of humour. As I write this I am listening
to the live webcast and rumours are spreading through Harare that Mugabe has died from
a stroke. A jubilant caller says people in Harare are celebrating: “Mugabe has gone to the
one-party state in the sky!” Presenter Tererai Karimakwenda laughs at the joke and, with
impeccable irony, plays a hit song by Latin Quarter: “I’m hearing only bad news, on Radio
Africa.”
SW Radio Africa broadcasts every night from 4pm to 7pm British standard time* on
6145Khz in the 49m band. Listen live or download archives and reports on
SWRadioafrica.com**
Guardian Unlimited
©Douglas Rogers
© Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003
The above article is reproduced with permission from Guardian Newspapers Limited. The
standard permission granted to exchange DX magazines does not apply to this article. Any
exchange DX magazine or person wishing to re-use this articles requires permission from
the Copyright holder (Guardian Nespapers Limited).
Thank you to Jack Fox for bringing the article to my attention for possible inclusion in the DX
Times. (Mark Nicholls - Chief Ed.)
*
**
1600-1900 UTC
http://swradioafrica.com/
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 43
DECEMBER 2003
Lord of the Rungs
The League Ladders Today
Compiled by
David Ricquish
Wellington
106,000 QSL’s
Every two months, club members can send in their QSL and country totals to join
one of the oldest rankings of DX success in the hobby – The Ladders. In these days of fewer
reception reports, just listing stations heard or making a tape recording, ranking the number
of QSL’s obtained is a real throwback to the early days of the hobby.
In the August 2003 rankings, 24 members participated in four different divisions:
MW, SW, FM-TV and Utilities. Between them, they’ve amassed some 106,000 QSL’s, reflecting
countless hours of listening, countless hours of writing reception reports and about
NZ$200,000 in postage expenses at today’s costs. Staggering. A little crazy?
In fact, without members collecting QSL’s, much of the recorded heritage of radio
would be lost forever, so the Ladders are a great way to encourage QSL collecting and to
help identify QSL collections for preserving in the future.
Laurie Boyer is our Pride of the South on Mediumwave
On MW, veteran Invercargill DXer Laurie Boyer is way out front with 4012. Laurie
says he likes to collect QSL’s because in his early days as a printer, he was attracted to the
many interesting letterheads used by different stations. His absolute best catch on MW has
to be the South African Broadcasting Corporation from Grahamstown, South Africa on 809
kHz with 2kW, heard just on 50 years ago at Aramoana.
The next top four rungs of the MW ladder are filled by Ray Crawford (Brisbane), Paul
Ormandy (Oamaru), Sutton Burtenshaw (Hamilton) and David Ricquish (Wellington).
Between them, these five members have 9,738 individual MW stations in the bag.
One interesting fact is that all five members began their DX hobby living in the South Island,
which remains the traditional home of MW DXing in NZ.
The rankings also cover individual countries verified. Here the top five listeners are
Ray Crawford, Paul Ormandy, Laurie Boyer, John Campbell and Bryan Clark
Clark. A couple of
North Islanders make it into this group, and between them, they’ve confirmed 718 countries,
or nearly 144 each on average. Ray says his favorite MW country verified is so hard to pin
down, but like Laurie’s, a highlight has to be a low power African. Radio Mayotte from
Dzaoudet, Mayotte on 1457 kHz with 4kW heard just days after the new country came on air
in 1977 is his pick.
Ian Cattermole catches Sunshine and Shortwave in Marlborough
On SW, yet another South Islander leads the way. Ian Cattermole (Blenheim) has
achieved 4706 verifications, and has recently been experimenting with different combinations
of email and snailmail reports to continue to build his total. He names Action Radio in
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
Georgetown, Guyana on 5950 kHz as his very best SW catch in many years of DXing and got
his QSL after just 2 months back in 1980.
The next top four rungs on SW are taken by Gunter Jacob (Germany), Barry Williams
(Auckland), Ray Crawford makes another appearance, and finally, John Durham (Tauranga).
Their combined QSL total is 15,072 individual SW stations. The North Island holds a slight lead
over other locations for our top five SW ladder climbers.
The top five listeners for SW countries verified are John Durham, John Campbell, Paul
Ormandy, Barry Williams and Bryan Clark
Clark. Between them, they have 1249 countries confirmed,
or just on 250 each on average John Durham says his rarest SW country verified is Islas
Malvinas during the Argentine occupation of the Falkland Islands, when Julio Lagos verified
Radio Nacional Islas Malvinas on 2370 kHz with 1kW. A majority of the members are also
ranked in the top five MW countries verified, demonstrating success on both wavebands.
Ron Killick needs a Ute to carry his Utilities in Christchurch
Ron Killick (Christchurch) has built a worldclass collection of 61,754 Utility stations
verified, amassed from 133 individual countries. This collection reflects decades of careful
listening and represents an amazing variety of broadcasters from fighter aircraft to warships
to fishing boats to landbased stations across the globe.
Trying to choose a favorite is almost impossible, but Ron singles out Balkan
BulgarianAirlines, a Tupolev TU-154B en route to Sofia and calling Sofia Airport on 11384 kHz
at 0725 UTC on October 9 1985. Running 200w, aircraft LZ-BTL confirmed with a QSL card in
English from the captain in the days well before the Iron Curtain disappeared.
Again, this area of the contest is open to more competition and with Ron spending
less time chasing QSL’s these days, your chances of building a unique collection of your own
are improving.
Balkan Bulgarian Airlines. Ron Killick Collection.
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
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DECEMBER 2003
Robert Krijger gets FM and Fresh Milk in the ‘naki
Robert Krijger (New Plymouth) is in a class of his own for the FM-TV rankings, with 678
stations confirmed from 6 separate countries. So much for line of sight! Robert selects Radio
Weka 92.1 mHz broadcasting from Waitangi, Chatham Islands as his rarest catch. The station
was heard just once on December 26, 1989. The Chatham Islands are a separate radio
country but only this one low power FM station broadcasts from the islands, about 700km
east of the New Zealand mainland.
The next top four rungs in this less contested part of the spectrum are held by Bryan
Clark, Paul Ormandy, Mark Nicholls and Andy McQueen
McQueen. Even so, the top five have 1,026
verifications between them. With so many FM stations now broadcasting, this area of the
contest is ripe for more competition, and North Islanders probably have an edge here!
Become a Lord of the Rungs today!
These 106,000 QSL’s are just the tip of an iceberg considering 90% of members aren’t
currently listed, and the collections of many hundreds of members who’ve been through the
club since 1948 and even earlier are excluded. Some of those collections are preserved
today in the NZRDXL Archives.
If collecting confirmations is part of your radio world, place your totals on the rungs
and join in! The next entries are due in December, when the next six-monthly winners are
also announced. The next round then begins, with updates in February and April and the
final in June.
Target is 115,000 QSL’s registered by December 2003
It’s certainly not all about being competitive, but it’s a wonderful way to preserve the
radio scene of today for future generations to understand. Collecting QSL’s today really helps
create the radio heritage of tomorrow. Just imagine how difficult it would be to understand
the radio scene of the 1920’s and 1930’s if members back then hadn’t made the effort to
communicate with the stations they were listening to at the time.
With this ‘tip of the hat’ to past members, let’s keep the tradition strong. With 106,000
confirmations already registered, let’s see if new and updated contributions can bring the
total up to 115,000 by the end of 2003.
Shortwave Station PCJ,
Eindhoven, Holland.
Eric Shackle Collection,
NZRDXL Archives
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 46
DECEMBER 2003
[email protected]
Compiled by Stuart Forsyth, Darfield
MEDIUMWAVE
JUN DEC INC
OPEN (Over 500)
Laurie Boyer
4006 4012 6
Ray Crawford
2286 2302 16
Paul Ormandy
1556 1565 9
Sutton Burtenshaw
1015 1040 35
David Ricquish
829
835 6
Bryan Clark
676
676 0
Barry Williams
648
Mark Nicholls
643
643 0
John Campbell
642
642 0
Stuart Forsyth
562
579 17
Paul Aronsen
529
530 1
SENIOR (301 - 500)
Peter Grenfell
443
443 0
INTERMEDIATE (151 - 300)
Andy McQueen
298
298 0
Frank Glen
257
Günter Jacob
240
256 16
Robert Krijger
228
JUNIOR (5 - 150)
Robert Park
86
Arthur De Maine
52
56
4
Andrew Sunde
22
23
1
FM-TELEVSION
Robert Krijger
Bryan Clark
Paul Ormandy
Mark Nicholls
Andy McQueen
Robert Park
678
148
110
42
29
19
42
0
CNTS
137
188
145
104
66
120
83
67
129
44
37
21
21
45
13
2
11
2
6
5
5
2
2
1
SHORTWAVE
JUN DEC INC
OPEN (Over 500)
Ian Cattermole
4591 4737 146
Günter Jacob
2752 2856 104
Barry Williams
2703
Ray Crawford
2582 2598 16
John Durham
2249 2258 9
Laurie Boyer
1750 1904 154
John Campbell
1672 1672 0
Robert Park
1655
Paul Ormandy
1644 1649 5
Bryan Clark
1355 1358 3
Paul Aronsen
794
800 6
Peter Grenfell
671
673 2
SENIOR (301 - 500)
Andy McQueen
386
386
Stuart Forsyth
366
367 1
INTERMEDIATE (151 - 300)
Arthur de Maine
266
270 4
JUNIOR (5 - 150)
Mark Nicholls
121
121
0
Frank Glen
70
Andrew Sunde
44
48
4
UTILITIES
Ron Killick
Robert Park
Günter Jacob
61754
78
14
CNTS
200
162
243
230
265
186
261
99
245
236
125
133
104106
92
55
49
34
133
5
12
Stuart Forsyth
c/- NZRDXL, P.O.Box 3011, Auckland
or direct to 27 Mathias St, Darfield 8172.
E-mail: [email protected]
My goodness - how time flies. Another 6 months has passed and our winners are: Broadcast Open
Sutton Burtenshaw (great to see you back in the winner’s circle!), and Intermediate Günter Jacob
(ausgezeichnet!); Shortwave - Open Laurie Boyer (with a whopping 154- whew!), closely followed by
Ian Cattermole with 146 and nobody else in the lower grades got above the magic number of 5 increases
in 6 months.
I am off to Europe for a month or so, I hope everybody else has a super Christmas and a happy, healthy
and propserous New Year.
73s,
Stu
NEW ZEALAND DX TIMES
PAGE 47
DECEMBER 2003
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